Maison Piaggio

Maison Piaggio
© Nguyen Quoc Dat

Maison Piaggio

David Rockwood, Architect

ARCHITECTS
David Rockwood, Architect

MANUFACTURERS
Grohe, Inax, Panasonic, Thp Beton, Teka

GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Apav Construction And Commercial Investment Company Limited

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Truong Phuoc Duc

MEP ENGINEERING
Nguyen Sy Hiep

CONSTRUCTION REPRESENTATIVE
Nguyen Quoc Dat Architects

WOOD FURNITURE, DOOR, AND WINDOW CONTRACTOR
ms Furniture, Llc

LEAD ARCHITECT
David Rockwood

PHOTOGRAPH
Nguyen Quoc Dat, David Rockwood, Vo Le Tuan, Trieu Chien

AREA
140 M²

LOCATION
Đà Nẵng, Vietnam

CATEGORY
Houses

Maison Piaggio is a two-story single-family rowhouse located near the southern edge of Da Nang, Viet Nam. The house is built on a typical 5m x 20m Da Nang lot and has an entry courtyard, living room, kitchen, two bedrooms, two bathrooms, and a studio.

Maison Piaggio
© David Rockwood
Maison Piaggio
© David Rockwood

Da Nang is hot and humid during much of the year, and maintaining interior thermal comfort is a challenge without the use of air conditioning.

To mitigate energy use while maintaining a connection to the outside environment, various passive design strategies are used.

Maison Piaggio
© David Rockwood
Maison Piaggio
© David Rockwood
Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien

Protection of openings is accomplished with horizontal and vertical shading devices.

Cooling cross-ventilation breezes flow horizontally around and over the central core.

The plan was configured as a hybrid of archaic (“Megaron” volume), early modern (“Domino” frame), and late modern (“Farnsworth” core) typology.

Maison Piaggio
© Nguyen Quoc Dat
Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien
Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien

This was the result of the search for simplicity and essentialism. An ‘A-B’ rhythm is used in the cross-section, where the ‘B’ defines the circulation zone.

This zone is partially topped with a skylight to bring daylight into the center of the plan. Concrete is poured in place and is left exposed for columns, beams, and ceilings.

Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien
Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien

Electrical and plumbing runs are concealed below or within slabs and masonry cavity walls. Insulated autoclaved aerated concrete block exterior cavity walls infill the concrete frame and help mitigate heat transfer.

Thermal migration through the roof is minimized by using rigid insulation and an uppermost layer of thermally isolated clay roof tiles coated with reflective paint. Tropical hardwood is used for sliding and louvered doors, furniture, and clerestory interior adjustable louver screens.

Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien
Maison Piaggio
© Trieu Chien

The selection of materials was guided by the desire to give a direct expression of their nature, to register the construction process, and to provide durability and performance at a reasonable cost.

The house design aligns with Le Corbusier’s notion of the “standard element” or object trouvé. The house is conceptualized as a tool (a practical means to an end, e.g., a Piaggio motorbike), though not in a purely instrumental sense. Rather, it aspires to be a tool akin to a teacup used in a tea ceremony. i.e., the house is proffered as a humble vessel to allow the unfolding of a ritual of the ordinary, that of a simple life.

Maison Piaggio
© David Rockwood
Maison Piaggio
© Vo Le Tuan
Maison Piaggio
© Vo Le Tuan


Maison Piaggio
Plan - Ground floor
Maison Piaggio
Plan - First floor
Maison Piaggio
Plan - Second floor
Maison Piaggio
Plan - Roof


Maison Piaggio
Elevation - West
Maison Piaggio
Elevation - East
Maison Piaggio
Elevation - North
Maison Piaggio
Elevation - South


Maison Piaggio
Section - AA
Maison Piaggio
Section - BB
Maison Piaggio
Section - CC