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.
Tanvir Residence in Dhaka, Bangladesh by Tanya Karim NR Khan & Associates
February 13th, 2021 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Tanya Karim NR Khan & Associates
An Experiment in “Symbiotic Architecture”, the building is constructed with hand poured cast concrete in wooden shuttering, retaining the impressions of the wood planks.
Where does a new aesthetics start from? From the aesthetics of a time? Technology? Material? Use? Or can it be from simple realities as climatic conditions? The residence faces a park and needed to have maximum exposure towards it both because of view and prevailing breeze but at the same time needed shading that would protect the opening from rain and reduce direct solar heat gain. We designed the shading device as a symbiotic growth over the building giving the structure an aesthetics of a symbiotic relationship of concrete and metal.
The house is “hand built”, the form-work is from hand sawn wood, flamed in a particular way to highlight its grains so that it can be transferred to the concrete. The concrete is hand poured; the metal panels are hand crafted on site. Even the main gate is hand beaten copper panels (initially beaten at the office to show the craftsmen the desired texture), same as the main door handles. The house has a home theatre and a spa in the semi basement alongside laundry and maids room, a living, dining and kitchen on the ground level, master bed and a daughter’s bed on the 1st floor and two more children’s bed on the second floor and a party space and roof terrace on the top.
The interior of the house takes the color scheme from the exterior and then adds wooden floors and soft toned furnish to soften it up. The house is flooded with natural light and most of it can be opened up to natural breeze. For the owners it’s a known way of life in an unknown “aesthetics”. Instead of looking for a form the house looks for “formlessness”, for an “evolved” beauty rather than a known construct.
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