23.2 House | OAO - Omer Arbel Office

Shortlisted for the WAF Awards 2010 White Rock / Canada / 2009

88
88 Love 11,621 Visits Published
Designed by Omer Arbel 23.2 is a house for a family built on a large rural acreage outside Vancouver in the West Coast of Canada. There is a gentle slope from east to west and two masses of old growth forest defining two “outdoor rooms” each with a its own distinct ecology and conditions of light; the house is situated at the point of maximum tension in between these two environments and as such acts at once to define the two as distinct and also to offer a focused transition between them. The design of the house itself began as a point of departure with a depository of one hundred year old Douglas Fir beams reclaimed from a series of burned down ware­houses. The beams were of different lengths and cross sectional dimensions and had astonishing proportions - some as long as 20 meters some as deep as 90 cm. It was agreed that the beams were sacred artefacts in their current state and that they would not manipulate them or finish them in any way. Because the beams were of different lengths and sizes the architect needed to com­mit to a geometry that would be able to accommodate the tremendous variety in di­mension while still allowing the possibility of narrating legible spaces. He settled on a triangular geometry. He folded wood triangular frames made of the reclaimed beams to create roof which would act as a secondary (and habitable) landscape drapping this artificial landscape over the gentle slope of the site. Folds were manipulated to create implicit and explic­it relationships between indoor and outdoor space such that every interior room had a corresponding exterior room. To maximize ambiguity between interior and exterior space he removed definition of one significant corner of each room by pulling the structure back from the corner it­self using bent steel columns. Also large accordion door systems were introduced in these open corners so that the entire façade on both sides of each significant corner could retract and completely disappear. The architect developed a detail that would allow the beams to define not only the ceilingscape of each interior room but also to read strongly as elements of the build­ing façade. For the interiors Omer Arbel curated a collection of vintage prototypes and limited editions by Vancouver designers working in the 60’s and 70’s… obscure names that never became famous but who were the birth of the modern movement in our region… our conceptual predecessors. We augmented this collection with pieces in current international discourse which bear some sort of relationship to the vintage pieces. The Hella Jongers Vitra sofa being a great example.
88 users love this project
Comments
View previous comments
    comment
    user
    Enlarge image

    Designed by Omer Arbel 23.2 is a house for a family built on a large rural acreage outside Vancouver in the West Coast of Canada. There is a gentle slope from east to west and two masses of old growth forest defining two “outdoor rooms” each with a its own distinct ecology and conditions of light; the house is situated at the point of maximum tension in between these two environments and as such acts at once to define the two as distinct and also to offer a focused transition between...

    Project details
    • Year 2009
    • Work finished in 2009
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Single-family residence
    Archilovers On Instagram
    Lovers 88 users