BLAF architecten

gjG House

gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert

GJG HOUSE

BLAF Architecten

PHOTOGRAPHS
Stijn Bollaert

CARPENTRY
Vlieghe

STRUCTURAL WORK
G-build

EPB
Barbara Oelbrandt

AREA
190 M²

STABILITY
Tecclem

YEAR
2015

CATEGORY
Houses

LOCATION
Ghent, Belgium

Text description provided by architect.

gjG House is one of the experimental houses BLAF architecten is known for in Flanders and beyond. It is part of their research called ‘Brick Wall City’, that addresses the precise relationship between material, construction, and the appearance of brick architecture.

gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert

Since the introduction of energy performance standards ‘EPB’ in 2006, thermal insulation in building skins gradually got thicker, causing a shift towards light and low-cost facade cladding materials such as putz, scales, tiles, textiles, etc.

As for brick buildings, this meant an evolution towards brick tiles glued onto buildings as ‘exterior wallpaper’. BLAF noticed in an early stage that a construction method with layers glued onto each other would lead to the impossibility to separate the materials at the end of the building’s life cycle, resulting in huge amounts of non-re-usable waste.

gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert

Also, in terms of the design, this evolution leads to new aesthetics, with tectonic expressions no longer to be considered as the result of stacking bricks, as well as a recalibrated position of the architect towards the design of the building elevation.

BLAF’s considerations on brick design and construction have led to a series of brick houses, exploring hybrid construction and the development of the new ‘Big Brick’. The gjG house is one of the early houses in that series, in which the architects explore the re-use of bricks and the shape of the shell in the function of its autonomy.

gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert

The gjG house seems to be set in a forest-like residential environment, while actually, it sits right next to the E17-highway in Ghent, on a plot that used to be part of the garden of a late 19th-century mansion.

The curved brick shell of the gjG house has multiple motives. First of all the house was to be built on a plot with trees. Instead of cutting the trees, the house was shaped to fit in between them.

Secondly, the shape of the shell allows it to be structurally autonomous. The stability of the outer brick wall is not depending on cross walls, columns, or beams, but merely on its form and the brick bonding.

gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert

Thirdly, the massive shell of the house contributes to the acoustic comfort on the inside. The shell is made out of re-used bricks, creating a generic and timeless aesthetic.

The shell supports the roof, together they form a ‘bell’, with a receptible interior space. The infill of the bell is the house, made with steel and timber frame constructions, making three stories in one area and one open space in another area.

The inside of the shell is finished with the same re-used bricks, creating the idea of an exterior space between the trees.

gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert
gjG House
© Stijn Bollaert


gjG House
Site plan
gjG House
Ground floor plan
gjG House
First floor plan
gjG House
Second floor plan


gjG House
Section
gjG House
Terrain profile


gjG House
Diagram
gjG House
Isometric view

BLAF architecten
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BLAF architecten
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