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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.

Vanglo House in Vancouver BC, Canada by LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

 
August 16th, 2016 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Artful urban living in a time of progressive densification

The Vanglo house has been designed as a truly urban house for a compact inner city infill site, centrally located at 135 East 17th Street in Main Street area of Vancouver. The site is 66’ wide but only 44’ deep with a permissible density of 1,850sf for two tenants/ families with a 1,350sf 3BR main home and a 500sf 1BR rental garden suite.

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

  • Architects: LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.
  • Project: Vanglo House
  • Location: 135 East 17th Avenue, Vancouver BC, Canada
  • Photography: Ema Peter
  • Developer and Builder: Vanglo Sustainable Construction Group
  • Architect and Designer: LWPAC Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture, Oliver Lang, Cynthia Wilson Principal, Thomas Bocahut
  • Structural Engineer: PJB Engineering, Pershing J. Balayo
  • Landscape Design: TLZ Design Consultants, Tenille Ziegenhagel
  • Interior Design: LWPAC + Vanglo
  • Lot size: 66’ x 40’ (w x d)
  • Date of completion: June 2014

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

The house is both a departure and continuation of the typical Vancouver house form and typology. A simple abstract unified volume is formed and detailed to engage the passerby observer and owner / tenant into a layered dialogue. Aspects of the organization of the Vancouver Special, neighbourhood and district by law regulations and roof forms, urban street front porch elements and compact multi tenant occupancy have been distilled in a single clear dynamic building shape.

The body continually transforms from horizontal and cantilevered on the west side to vertical and grounded on the east side.

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

As a form of urban art, the white creased body is detailed with concrete fibre panel facade to unify its form, while blurring typical expressions of floor levels into an abstraction. The windows further emphasize this abstract expression and strategically perforate the skin to mediate privacy in direct correlation to the functionality of the rooms behind.

The roof has been designed like an inverted boat hull, constructed with wooden ribs that free span the 17’ width of the building and create a 14’ high upper level living room. This generous spatial experience, not unlike a fully liberated attic, compensates for the required compactness given by the limited density.

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

In addition, the house’s inverted vertical organization with the living room at the top provides a delightful living/play/entertainment room placed into the tree canopy that seamlessly extends the main family space to the upper deck, effectively doubling up the living space with a threshold free fully retractable folding glass wall.

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

The design approach provides such essential adaptability and flexibility to changing living conditions by providing clear span spaces throughout. Views back to Main Street, along 17th Street, into the tree canopy and the neighbouring backyards have been carefully conceived. Access to daylight on 2-4 sides in all rooms while mitigating privacy with access to outdoor living provide essential qualities for urban dwelling on a small urban infill site.

The urban response of the design also evolves social aspects of urban living providing a contemporary front porch and large stoop like entry stair.

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

Image Courtesy © Ema Peter

In summary, the design of the house seeks to link the historic values of the City into an urban future, mediate various scales of the city’s fabric with the lives of future occupants and do so with an authentic and performance driven architecture.

The Vanglo house was designed to meet high sustainability standards. The previous house structure has been carefully deconstructed and largely recycled, the new house is Energy Star compliant, has triple glazed ‘super’ windows and a high performance envelope. The house is very compact with an emphasis on adaptability for a choice of family, office, recreational or income rental uses.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC - Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC - Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC - Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC - Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

Image Courtesy © LWPAC – Lang Wilson Practice in Architecture Culture Inc.

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Categories: House, Residential




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