Family House Hlubocepy
ARCHITECTS
Ro_ar Szymon Rozwalka Architects
BUILDING SERVICES ENGINEERING
Projekce Tzb Prokeš, Jaroslav Prokeš
DESIGN TEAM
Adéla Kyselová, Ada Rypl-žabčíková, Jakub Staník, Jan Vojtíšek
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Statika Olomouc
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT
Flera
MANUFACTURERS
Ton, Artemide, Asilo, Brokis, Ceramica Vogue, Delta Light, Entra, Ragno, Schüco, Vitra
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS
Daniel Lemák, Roman Koiš
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Bursik Holding
PHOTOGRAPHS
Viola Hertelová
AREA
331 m²
YEAR
2021
LOCATION
Praha 5, Czech Republic
CATEGORY
Houses
The proposed building is located on the border of two different worlds: the urban and the natural.
From the north-western side of the site is a wedge of bio-corridor stretching along the Dalejský Brook.
The corridor is enhanced by the distinctive exposure of the Hlubočepské Rocks. Urban space surrounds the site on the south and east sides.
It is a chaotic and random development, often adversely affecting the value of the projected terrain. The form and spatial layout of the house is a direct response to this context.
The proposed house design seeks to extend the natural context into the interior of the site and into the interiors.
On the other hand, the house is then separated from the ‘urban world’, for which it becomes an abstract body that, through its form and scale corresponds to the surrounding rocks in the background.
At the same time, the form of the building addresses the need for proper illumination of the rooms by natural light, the question of “the problem of the ‘narrow’ entrance and the problematic location of the neighboring building on the southern boundary of the site.
In the first steps, we designed a building created by the land deformation method.
The terrain was to transition smoothly from the northwest side into an artificial hill into which the house would be placed.
From the southeast side, the “hill” was to be undercut, which would allow the creation of an entrance patio under the building, created in that part by a different rectangular geometry.
Due to the need to limit the budget, it was necessary to significantly reduce the previously proposed building.
It was decided on the risky method of directly cutting away “unnecessary” elements, which had to significantly affect the final result.
Such a deliberately primitive and direct cut-off has in places resulted in surprisingly good effects, in other places the effect was worse.
The changes involved almost exclusively the organic, the rear part of the building and had little effect on the interior spaces, which, according to the original concept, were created by the clash between two geometries: organic and rectangular.