AER House

AER House
© Sarah Arnould

AER HOUSE

Lesgourgues

ARCHITECTS
Lesgourgues

ELECTRICAL INSTALLATION
Gaillard Electricité

PLUMBING
Mora et frères

WOODEN CARPENTRY
Menuiserie Laguian

MANUFACTURERS
Wicona, Auson, Arcelor-Mittal, Tilly

WOOD FRAME, CLADDING, ROOFING
Dubernet Charpente

CONCRETE FLOOR AND FOUNDATIONS
Duvignau

AREA
155 m²

PHOTOGRAPHS
Sarah Arnould

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Onesse-laharie, France

CATEGORY
Houses

Text description provided by architect.

In the Landes, southwestern region of France, within an “airial”, a large airy plot whose typology and name are specific to the department, this wooden frame house welcomes a vertical cladding with black wood joint covers and natural eaves.

AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould

It is a construction that intends to respect the characteristics of the airial by borrowing the aesthetics of barns and other agricultural buildings originally built on those large grassed areas.

In this second home project, the emphasis has been placed on the living room where gatherings and activities with friends are frequent whiles on vacation.

AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould

It is a double-height space that includes the kitchen, living room, stove, and furniture staircase that leads upstairs.

Behind this room, you will find the master bedroom, a dressing room, a bathroom, and a utility room. Upstairs there is a guest bedroom, a dormitory, and a bathroom.

Two very wide openings face each other in the living room, therefore making it a not-inside-nor-outside space, a covered space where it is possible to shelter from the rain and the sun.

AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould

In the summer, the two-meter cantilevered, asymmetrical eaves prevent the southwestern rays from reaching the house, and thus, coupled with the ventilation of the facing bays, the central space promises a certain coolness.

Large sliding shutters made of black wood claustra filter the light during the day and protect from animal intrusions at night allowing the house to be naturally ventilated at all times.

AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould

The entire outline of the building is encircled by a concrete ribbon, the width of which coincides with the eaves overhanging it.

It can be considered as a corridor of the house on which all the doors of the ground floor can be opened. In the bedrooms, the windows are square and frame the first-morning landscape, the forest to the east, as a photograph.

AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould


AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould
AER House
© Sarah Arnould


AER House
West Elevation 
AER House
East Elevation 
AER House
North Elevation 
AER House
South Elevation 


AER House
Second Floor plan 
AER House
First Floor Plan 
AER House
Staircase Furniture 

AER House
Section