Home Design Find - Interior Design, Architecture, Modern Furniture - Part 67
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Home Design Find

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Huge White Frames Modulate Light Within the Cosmic House

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The strange overlapping layers that define this unusual “Cosmic House” by Fukuyama-based UID Architects are integral to the design.

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A mixture of enclosed and open spaces across two levels create an intimate relationship with daily and seasonal changes.

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Open and closed rectangles define an ongoing series of ever-shifting spaces.

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The effect can be almost symphonic.

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Here, a high frame centered over two lower ones creates a long skylight.

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Within another series of frames, a living room steps down from a higher garden courtyard.

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The shapes form terraces that extend inside and living rooms that open out to the many small gardens.

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The surprise of sunlight that washes these frames suggests a kitchen set in a natural forest glade.

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Each of the spaces is intimately connected with nature.

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Yet there is also a connection with other people and the city – but in the distance.

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The lovely quality of the light within the frames is peaceful and diffused.

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Each of the frames highlights different sounds, scents, light and breezes around the site.
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The result is a completely unique home with an intimate relationship with its setting.

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Magical Site for Stone Minimalism on the Rio Coast

It’s not often that an architect gets to choose the perfect site as part of the design process.

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Given just that opportunity, the Brazilian firm Studio Arthur Casas Chose this idyllic place between the mountain and the ocean in Rio de Janeiro to site a home for an old friend.

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Set in Rio’s almost fairy-tale landscape, Casa AL was clad in traditional plaster and local stone.

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The architect was sure he could design to take full advantage of the views despite the very steep site.

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The view is just breathtaking, so the architect aligned all the living areas to make the most of that.

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So the house spans three storeys in the front to accommodate the steep site.

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“We chose the land together so, for me, it was clear that in the end we would count on the scenery,” said Arthur Casas.

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The stone middle storey, built out from ground level at the rear, opens out to a raised terrace with panoramic views.

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At the rear of this middle floor, a peaceful secluded courtyard hosts an entrance from the hillside.

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The glass panels slide open and disappear into the sidewalls to allow the living room to extend out to the terrace and swimming pool.

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A stone wall hides the entrance bridge onto the middle floor and the secluded garden courtyard below.

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A grassy roof topping the middle stone floor becomes a garden for the timber-clad small third storey housing just a master bedroom and home office.

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This timber third storey appears as if balanced on the stone walls of the entrance courtyard.

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Where stone is used, it forms both the interior and exterior wall.

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Guest bedrooms on the ground floor open out onto the strip of garden landscaped to frame the stunning sea view.

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Brazilian Teak, an extremely resistant timber, is chosen for use in interior furnishings and is hardy enough for outdoor use as well.
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The utmost in minimalist luxury, the bathroom features a glass wall dividing wet from dry areas.
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A truly unique home, that combines a magical site with a design that simply makes the most of it.

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Sustainable Alice Springs Home for Surviving the Australian Desert

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The clients adore the extreme beauty of the Alice Springs desert and wanted an age-in-place, sustainable home from which to enjoy the desert for the rest of their lives.
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Australian firm Dunn & Hillam created a home that is self sufficient in energy and water, with solar panels on the roof supplying electricity, and banked in a battery rather than connected to the distant grid.
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The home is also dug into the ground to try to moderate the incredible temperature extremes from highs of 45C and lows of -6C.
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For the hottest desert days, the cool pool is a must.
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The clients love the desert, its vast views, and its warmth.

Much of the year is crisp, dry and mildly warm days and clear starlit nights.
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The roof is suspended above the house, cooling the air underneath.
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An interior courtyard is placed to maximize shade in the hottest part of the day.
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The butterfly roof is for draining the maximum amount of rainwater to the tanks below.

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As well as natural steel and natural concrete blocks, part of the exterior is compressed fiber-cement boards that need no maintenance.

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Fiber-cement boards are well-equpped to handle the UV attack from the sun.

Altogether, a very practical home that truly makes the best of living in such a challenging – and rewarding – climate.