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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.

Ha Long Villa in Quang Ninh, Vietnam by VTN architects

 
June 10th, 2020 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: VTN architects

Vietnam has an abundance of nature and townscapes that are registered as World Heritage Sites. Economic growth due to the increase in tourism has raised the standard of living but has also given way to reckless development by clearing away nature. To tackle this situation, we want to create a house that will connect people and nature. Ha Long, home to Ha Long Villa, is a beautiful coastal city in northern Vietnam, 160 km northeast of Hanoi. It is also home to the UNESCO World Heritage Site of Ha Long Bay. In particular, it is a city abundant with local industries such as fisheries and coal mining, and it is a region that is rapidly developing alongside its tourism industry. The site is near the coast and overlooks Ha Long Bay with a landscape made of thousands of large and small rocks.

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

  • Architects: VTN architects
  • Project: Ha Long Villa
  • Location: Quang Ninh, Vietnam
  • Photography: Hiroyuki Oki
  • Principal Architects: Vo Trong Nghia
  • Design team: Nguyen Van Thu
  • Site area: 514.0m2
  • Footprint: 231.5 m2
  • GFA: 1190.0 m2
  • Status: Built in 2020

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

In such a rich setting, we have designed a sustainable home that exists in harmony with the surrounding environment and seeks to become part its landscape. The main concept of the house is to create space where people can live in a forest.

In creating a surrounding forest, the house is comprised of a pentagon within a pentagon that establishes spatial layers of interior and semi-exterior spaces filled with greenery.  This composition creates deep shadows as part of the double skin green façade against the hot tropical climate. This buffer space between the interior and exterior spaces protect the house against the hot climate and noise. Every semi-exterior space is connected by the main spiral staircase. There is a spatial sequence from the outside to the inside, from ground to roof, and through the semi-exterior space with a large window and plenty of greenery to feel the rich natural landscape and city view from different angles.

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

The semi-exterior space connects the interior and the terrace part of the garden, and is a place to promote various living activities. It is a multi-purpose space which serves as a connection between each space. It is a place for gardening, sightseeing, sitting, walking and it also connects to the living space. These distinctive space offers residents options in their daily lives, like whether to dine inside or outside on a particular day. The various movements in the resident’s lives are also conveyed to the neighborhood through exterior of window façade.

Exterior walls are made by rough exposed concrete which creates an impression of stone found in Ha Long Bay. The greenery in the semi-exterior spaces casts shadows on this strong facade, creating an ever-changing appearance over time. The contrast between the rough concrete and soft trees expresses a unique impression to the outside. Additionally, with dozens of plants planted on the roof, we create an area several times larger than the original green area.

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Ha Long Villa is one of the prototypes of “House for Trees”, which is a series of residential projects. The aim of the series is to bring green spaces back into the city, and to design as much greenery as was present in the original landscape to provide a healthier life to people living in the city. Due to the simplicity in the concept, the idea of “House for Trees” can be multiplied almost anywhere in tropical climate regions.

As part of the vast landscape, Ha Long Villa harmonizes with the natural environment. And Ha Long Villa aims to be a space where people return to living surrounded by nature.

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © Hiroyuki Oki

Image Courtesy © VTN architects

Image Courtesy © VTN architects

Image Courtesy © VTN architects

Image Courtesy © VTN architects

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Categories: Apartments, House, Residential, Villa




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