Mezi plutky | Between Fences | Daniela Hradilova

Čeladná / Czech Rep. / 2020

17
17 Love 1,901 Visits Published

The conversion of this residential settlement into a boutique hotel with four guest rooms and a generous common area required an overall refurbishment.


The first year meant renewing the shingle roof and the stucco facade and casement windows, as well as erecting stone walls, and building the stone yards and parking. 


The following year the interiors were refurbished and the garden revived - the old barn was converted into a conservatory and the defunct water tank into a swimming pond. Traditional crafting technologies were used to build a new barn serving as a summer bedroom.


In the ground floor areas we used old timber to restore the timber ceiling and laid old stones of sandstone and marl stone to recreate the flooring.  The stone continues via the glass terrace door and connects the interior with the exterior. While we maintained the original layout the ground floor was enabled to have two kitchens - a professional “black” one and a “white”one, to be used by the guests.  It also accommodates for a dining room, a living room with an open fire place, a library, an entrance lounge, restrooms and one of the four guest rooms (40m2).


The originally non-residential attic is open into the ridge of the roof and spruce planks are used as flooring, spruce boards as wall cladding. The entire volume of the wood is treated by natural oils with added white and light grey pigments aiming at bringing light into the space. The attic is divided into four areas: three guest rooms (36m2, 44m2 a 70m2) and a boiler room.


The conversion of the house respects its original layout including the ratio and location of windows and doors.  The only exception and a contrasting element at the same time being the opening of the ceiling in the entrance lounge and the staircase areas enabling the spacious upward view. Apart from the timber ceilings in the rooms and the vaults in the dining hall and the kitchen not a lot was preserved in the interiors. However, the materials introduced by the refurbishment and the restoration works do not interfere with the harmonious nature of the house and appear to be homogeneously original.


We were faced with several challenges and this is where they took us:


1/ to recreate the place:


The surroundings are as important as the core item itself. Refurbishing a house means creating the interiors and planting the garden. “Between fences” is being in between, between the ‘labelled boxes’.


2/ to bring light into an old house:


The original windows  of the old house were small and insufficient.  While keeping the interference with the structure to the minimum  we were looking for a way how to bring more light inside.  


In the ground floor an insufficient  and  valueless additional soffit was removed and the original timber ceiling was restored, fair shade stone was selected for the floorings, the inner windows and window sills treated with white mat coating and the walls covered by white plaster. 


The ground floor of the house is connected with the first floor by a minimalist oak staircase framed by a white plateau of the railing. The corridor running through the house is open horizontally via a glass door leading into the garden and vertically into the highest point of the house. In the spacious attic, originally with merely four small gable wall windows, the light is multiplied thanks to the surface coating of the wood as well as thanks to the small round roof windows (also referred to as “poached egg skylights”) having been added. Opening the  space up to the ridge of the roof helped.  We also separated the bathrooms from the rooms by glass partitions so as not to make the space feel smaller but on the contrary complementing and expanding it.


3/ to respect and continue:


We did not opt for a demolition;  we aimed at sustaining as much as possible of what was left and at conforming to the surrounding landscapes and views, to the history of the place.  We used strong materials and handiwork of the locals, we fell in with the traditional craftsmanship and craft technologies. The stone floors jointly with the timber ceilings have become the most impressive elements of the house - in spite of being naturally rough, they add the ingredients of coziness and calmness to the space. 


We wanted to do both to conserve and converse and to move the house forward. To revive the house by a contemporary design and art and to inspire the guests, to surprise them. 


We introduced a lot of “new” which coexists alongside the “old” and the new and the old complement each other. We played with the contrasts: contrasts of the rough and the smooth surfaces, the traditions and the latest design. The interior of the house is simple and spacious, both for living and for fantasies. 


Architect, interior designer & garden designer: Daniela Hradilová



TECHNICAL INFORMATIONS


HOUSE (250 m2)


new roof beams, spruce timber


new traditional roofing, spruce shingles, thermal rock wool insulation, newly


installed roof windows of "bool's eye" type


original mixed stone - and brick - masonry without insulation, lime plaster,


restored stucco, original floor structures above ground floor


original, restored, old spruce beams


replica of original casement windows, pine


new main doors - glass in thin aluminium frame


flooring - reused historical sandstone, marl stone, brick and cement tiles,


spruce planks


tiles in bathrooms


floor heating and historical heaters


wall cladding in attic, reused spruce planks



OLD & NEW BARNS ( 33m2 & 72m2)


new roof beams, spruce timber


new traditional roofing, spruce shingles


original brick masonry


cladding - larch timber without surface treatment/ processing


new windows and main doors - glass in aluminium frame


flooring - reused historical stone tiles, marl stone, larch planks without


surface processing


new fireplace - architectural concrete


 


GARDEN (4000m2)


fences, parking - local quarry stone, larch timber elements


terraces - reused sandstone and granite tiles


new biotope swimming pool, reused granite stones


reconstruction of old well, local quarry stone


planting - local plants and herbs, trees (fir, beech, linden, birch, buxus)


decoration - original historical stone pots


garden furniture/ Hay



INTERIOR


design Daniela Hradilová


doors, benches, cupboards, beds, bathroom furniture, library - Czech oak


other furniture: Karl Andersson & Sonner, Kartel, Hay, Baxter 


lighting: Friz Hansen/ Lightyears, Flos


bathroom: Duravit, Riho, Huppe, Zucchetti


power plugs: ABB, door handle: Formani 


art: tapestry MGM Valašské Meziříčí, herbarium - framed originals (Basilius Besler, 1613), Dechem, Georg Jensen, Bomma


photographer: Romana Bennet


www.romanabennet.com


@romana.bennet


 


 https://www.urlaubsarchitektur.de/en/mezi-plutky/


https://www.theaficionados.com/hotels/czech-republic


https://www.theaficionados.com/search-results?search=mezi+plutky&submit=Submit


https://www.welcomebeyond.com/property/mezi-plutky/


 

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    The conversion of this residential settlement into a boutique hotel with four guest rooms and a generous common area required an overall refurbishment. The first year meant renewing the shingle roof and the stucco facade and casement windows, as well as erecting stone walls, and building the stone yards and parking.  The following year the interiors were refurbished and the garden revived - the old barn was converted into a conservatory and the defunct water tank into a swimming pond....

    Project details
    • Year 2020
    • Work finished in 2020
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Hotel/Resorts / Tourist Facilities / Interior Design
    • Websitehttp://www.meziplutky.cz
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    Lovers 17 users