Residential Building in St Sulpice

Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti

RESIDENTIAL BUILDING IN ST SULPICE

Lacroix Chessex

ARCHITECTS
Lacroix Chessex

MANUFACTURERS
Barro, Barro & Cie, Claude Favre, Pizzera Poletti

LEAD ARCHITECTS
Simon Chessex, Hiéronyme Lacroix

COLLABORATORS
Grégoire Martin, Ludovic Durand, Ana Sá, Celia Laserna, Sofia Gaspar, Andrea Pellacani

AREA
800 m²

YEAR
2016

LOCATION
Saint Sulpice, Switzerland

CATEGORY
Apartments

Text description provided by architect.

This residential building is the third project executed by Lacroix Chessex on Bochet street in St Sulpice village (Switzerland), between House Guignet and Villa Sabbatini.

Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Joël Tettamanti

The building is composed of six residential appartments in co-ownership and can be thought of an addition of two single houses - two parallelepiped rectangles with their ridges - out of which a clover with straight edges would have been cut. 

One leaflet faces the north on the road side, where the entrance is situated, the other two face the south-east and the south-west.

Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti

Each three floors is divided into two parts from the north to the south and is composed of two appartments of 4.5 rooms (3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 1 kitchen opened on the living room, 1 veranda and 1 balcony).

The spaces are accommodated in symmetry with the staircase situated in the center. Each appartment includes a wooden veranda on the South which allows the outdoor spaces to literally enter into the interior ones.

Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti

The balconies have been conceived similarly at the south (on the south side) whereas the bedrooms are all oriented towards the west and the east.

The main entrance, the kitchen, the dining and living rooms create all together a wide and complexe range of perspectives, with openings up to 180 degrees and with two floors in height for the appartments of the second floor.

The various materials used for these appartments give a rather rough but warm atmosphere and invite for a longer stay:

Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti

the wood in the bedroom floors, a stone floor in the living spaces, a concrete ceiling and white walls.

Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Joël Tettamanti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti


Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti
Residential Building in St Sulpice
© Toniatuh Ambrosetti


Residential Building in St Sulpice
Site Plan
Residential Building in St Sulpice
Basement Floor Plan
Residential Building in St Sulpice
Ground Floor Plan
Residential Building in St Sulpice
First Floor Plan
Residential Building in St Sulpice
Second Floor Plan
Residential Building in St Sulpice
Roof Plan


Residential Building in St Sulpice
Elevation
Residential Building in St Sulpice
Elevation
Residential Building in St Sulpice
Elevation