Open side-bar Menu
 ArchShowcase
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Terrace House Tokiostrasse in Vienna, Austria by ARTEC Architekten

 
September 16th, 2012 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: ARTEC Architekten

“The Town Musicians of Bremen as Terrace House”

Analogous to the Grimm Brothers’ fairy tale The Town Musicians of Bremen (whose main characters are a donkey, a dog, a cat, and a rooster), this reinterpretation of terrace houses involves stacking different apartment types atop one another.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

  • Architects: ARTEC Architekten
  • Project: Terrace House Tokiostrasse
  • Location: Vienna, Austria
  • Assistants: Michael Ivancsics; Heinrich Büchel, Ronald Mikolics, Michael Murauer (detail planning), Wolf Deucker (model); Ronald Mikolics; Katharina Kothmiller, Irene Yerro (authority planning);
  • Competition: Helmut Lackner, Burkhard Schelischanski; Martins Pilens (model), Ivan Zdenkovic (renderings)
  • Client: Neues Leben Ltd., a communal residential developer-agency
  • Structural engineering: Anton Harrer, Krems
  • Assistant: Christian Petz, Vienna
  • Building services planning: Johann Ernst, Olbendorf
  • Electricity planning: Michael Künzl, Vienna
  • Building physics: Rainer Stepan, Vienna
  • Landscape planning: Jakob Fina, Vienna
  • Commissioned: 2006
  • Completed: February 2010
  • 100 flats (social housing)
  • Site: 3.549 m2
  • Building footprint: 2.485 m2
  • Gross floor area: 14.859 m2
  • Effective area: 9.413 m2
  • Volume (above ground): 39.933 m3
  • Volume (total): 48.881 m3

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Dwelling types normally considered suburban, with the accompanying outdoor spaces, are stacked atop one another to achieve an urban bundle with high density: On the very bottom of the stack, the units each have an open floor plan with a gallery at the back and a garden in front; on the next level, maisonettes face on to an atrium courtyard; next there are 2-story row houses with terraces; and at the top allotment-garden “houses” are separated by courtyards.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Flats with double-story loggias (Casablanca typology) complete the stock. Along the street, a wing made up of the Casablanca type on “stilts” is superimposed upon the physical site on Tokiostrasse. A simple, ribbon-like element marking the apartments in the facade (nicknamed “the spider”) provides the rigid massing with a physiognomy facing the public realm as well as an outermost boundary of the respective dwelling-units toward the street.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

To the east, a green space running from north to south is flanked by the stacked structures, whose respective circulation is a new take on the Laubengang (a veranda-like walkway with a long tradition in Central Europe). To the south and north, the wings running along the property lines and enclosing the courtyard are only two stories high. In this manner, with respect to both the new structure and its neighbors, the sunlight and the view are only minimally infringed upon, and the sense of privacy and articulation toward the street remains intact. The vegetation at the center of the complex is linked to the streetscape via the open ground floor zone.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

The sculptural building massing is articulated to provide the apartments with a pronounced relationship to the outdoors. Every apartment has its own adjoining outdoor space – the majority of them potentially compact gardens. All apartments are cross-ventilated; the kitchens and bathrooms receive daylight and have natural ventilation.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

In addition, the residents have access to the roof surface atop the wing running along the street, with its green terrace, swimming pool and sun deck; the playgrounds on terraces are situated at “mid-level”, and the ground-level courtyard is a recreational area and playground, as well.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

The garage’s skylights also double as seating and illuminaires in the courtyard. The building’s exterior is characterized by the atrium and its vegetation, as well as by the terraces; the high degree of permeability at street level translates into an open atmosphere for residents and passers-by, and ensures that sufficient surface area will be available for possible future adaptations.

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Image Courtesy ARTEC Architekten

Tags: ,

Categories: House, Residential




© 2024 Internet Business Systems, Inc.
670 Aberdeen Way, Milpitas, CA 95035
+1 (408) 882-6554 — Contact Us, or visit our other sites:
TechJobsCafe - Technical Jobs and Resumes EDACafe - Electronic Design Automation GISCafe - Geographical Information Services  MCADCafe - Mechanical Design and Engineering ShareCG - Share Computer Graphic (CG) Animation, 3D Art and 3D Models
  Privacy PolicyAdvertise