Design

glazed positions stress tiefes haus' dark brick front in germany

.Tiefes Haus alterations split-level concept on slim story in Dreieich On a slim plot in Dreieich, Germany, surrounded by vacation homes and also big trees, Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level style of the authentic establishment, including existing wall surfaces right into a contemporary elongated home structure. The first stage is actually zoned via a variety of floor offsets, creating unique spatial adventures. Developed by Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) as well as Marc Flick, the building is a little slowed down at the ground amount to specify the entrance.all photos by David Schreyer uniform black front visually combines Tiefes Haus' layout Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and also engineer Marc Flick portion the interior in to 2 major places hooked up by a two-story gallery including extensive glazing. The frontal segment of our home includes an open style fitting the hall, visitor location, and also vernissage space, along with a visible stairs delivering direct access to the higher floor and cellar. The home kitchen and sitting room, using perspectives of the garden, are located in the rear part. The top flooring is actually arranged into a kids's place as well as a sleeping place, attached by a concrete path with the picture. A continual roof connections the two areas all together, both structurally and also aesthetically. To avoid getting too hot, the large glass surface areas of the longitudinal facade are oriented northward. The concept contrasts floor-to-ceiling home windows and maple internal doors with raw concrete surface areas as well as polished terrazzo flooring. The homogeneous darker exterior unifies the unique window layouts, making a natural outdoor aesthetic.Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level concept on a slender story in Dreieich, Germanylarge glass areas on the longitudinal exterior are adapted northward to prevent overheatingthe uniform black facade visually unifies the various home window layouts of the housefloor-to-ceiling home windows contrast along with raw concrete surface areas in the interior decoration.