Tidal House | studio to po ma

Den Burg / Netherlands / 2023

27
27 Love 2,963 Visits Published

Tidal House explores the relationship between material, landscape and dweller.


The house is situated on Texel Island on the border of a rural area that passes into woods, dunes and the North Sea. It includes both a living part as well as a separate practice space with waiting room.


Tidal House consists of similar volumes that are seemingly loosely placed on the site. Like objects, left behind by the tides. The volumes are slightly rotated and shifted. With in-between left over, open spaces, to connect the landscape.


This dynamic setting influences inside the changes in light and atmosphere during the day and the way the spaces relate to the surrounding landscape.


The sculptural volumes of the house are kept mainly closed on the street side, a narrow road. On the garden side large windows and sliding doors provide a direct connection with the landscape. This makes the seasonal changes tangible in the interior.


The various volumes form an open, continuous space each with its own character.


A change in material creates a horizontal division at a height of 2.40 m throughout the house. This change in material, between birch plywood, stucco and steel beams, influences the experience of the interior as a constructed landscape of spaces and transitions.


The house has several sustainable implementations: a prefabricated timber structure, facade cladding and window frames of sustainable modified wood, a roof cover of recycled aluminum, natural ventilation, a concrete floor to retain the heat with floor heating and re-used travertine floor tiles.


The house is all electric: In addition to an air-to-water heat pump energy is generated by built in solar panels on the roof of the shed.


Rain water from the roofs is collected in an underground water tank to be re-used for the watering of the garden.


Tidal house is an open and dynamic construction with the surrounding landscape. To expose new spatial experiences and to stimulate changes in the way the spaces are used over time.


 


Materials:


Construction: Timber frame construction, prefabricated


Facade cladding: NobelWood, sustainable modified radiata pine


Frames: Accoya, sustainable modified radiata pine


Roof cover: FalZinc, standing-seam roof, recycled aluminum


Sills: Holonite, composite stone


Interior walls: Birch plywood - stucco


Floor finish: Travertin floor tiles, re-used


Terraces: Concrete with GGBS cement


Pavement: Grass paving


Technique: Air-to-water heat pump, Solar panels (full black), Floor heating, Natural ventilation


Program: House 150 m2


Practice Space, Waiting room, Shed 100 m2


Contractor: Bouw & Timmerbedrijf Texel


 


Photo Credits: Lars van Es


 

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    Tidal House explores the relationship between material, landscape and dweller. The house is situated on Texel Island on the border of a rural area that passes into woods, dunes and the North Sea. It includes both a living part as well as a separate practice space with waiting room. Tidal House consists of similar volumes that are seemingly loosely placed on the site. Like objects, left behind by the tides. The volumes are slightly rotated and shifted. With in-between left over, open spaces,...

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