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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.

Chonburi Sila House in Thailand by Anghin Architecture

 
July 8th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Anghin Architecture

Chonburi Sila House is located in an industrial city of Chonburi just right on a couple of highways connecting most of the country’s factories to the country’s capital. Being surrounded by a number of quarries, factories, warehouses and heavy duty highways, Chonburi Sila House faced with some design challenges where living condition is not an ideal. Given the rigid nature of the house’s context, the northern, eastern and western faces of the house have to be mostly shielded from a heavy amount of dust and traffic pollution from the highways while also blocking the occupants from a view of a neighboring industrial junkyard and industrial trucks that run the highways 24 hours a day leaving only the southern face free to be open. Fortunately, the south facing side is a residence and is green enough for us to take advantage from.

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

  • Architects: Anghin Architecture
  • Project: Chonburi Sila House
  • Location: Chonburi, Thailand
  • Photography: Chaovarith Poonphol
  • Head Architect: Ekkasit Jaeng-anghin
  • Structural Engineer: Tai Athiarpanon
  • Design Team: Papatsorn, Darinthip
  • Area: 275 sqm
  • Project Year: 2018

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

To achieve our design goals where various degrees of privacy, solidity and openness are required, the house was designed with a set of solid planes of different dimensions as a prominent feature directly inspired by many surrounding quarries found in the area. With these planes, the space of the house was sliced or carved into three main volumes arranged and stacked in such a way that mimics the characteristic of the sila (sila means stone in Thai) quarries. Layer by layer, these planes help shielding the residents from viewing into the derelict junkyard, highways, while at the same time, providing each volume with a private access to the south opening—channeling the view into the south garden. The striking feature of these planes also give very little hint about the true shape and size of the interior volume encased inside; from some angles, the inside volume seems nonexistent, while on the other hand, if viewing from the south garden, the house shows a vast amount of openness as the solid planes transform to become almost disappear.

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Lights and heat were also taken into consideration; the main walls are double walls designed with air-gap insulation, the walls sliced into the house onto the direction to catch the local wind, windows and openings are located to promote cross ventilation, skylights are used to bring in lights and ventilate air in areas where side openings are inappropriate. The results are that all areas are naturally illuminated and ventilated.

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Interior functions are arranged according to the required level of privacy. The entrance and the social areas are on the lower front layer: the first of the three divided volumes. The middle volume serves as a semi-private area where the main vertical circulation equipped with the skylight is located along with a Buddha praying area, a study area, a toilet and a kitchen. The third layer: the last volume of the house, provides a set of private spaces including bedrooms equipped with private balconies and a bathroom with a private skylight and interior garden.

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Chaovarith Poonphol

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

Image Courtesy © Anghin Architecture

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Categories: House, Residential




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