Tuesday, December 31, 2019

WeeHouse | Alchemy

WeeHouse | Alchemy

The Sonoma weeHouse is a small, ultra-minimal home—based on Alchemy’s original weeHouse®—customized to meet specific style and finishing requirements of the client, Apple’s Director of Store Design, and an architect himself. It is composed of two minimalist open-sided boxes set on concrete plinths nestled on the edge of gnarled oaks.
The project proved to be a best-case scenario for illustrating the efficiencies of prefabrication. It was designed in Minnesota for a client in San Francisco, built in Oregon, and shipped to its California site 90% complete. Steel accessories including stairs, porch railings, and laser cut trim were prefabricated by the architects in Minnesota and shipped to complete the project.

Courtesy of Alchemy – Photography: Geoffrey Warner

The primary structure (640 SF) features a whitewashed oak bed box in the middle of the volume. An open kitchen/dining/living room is on one side, and a toilet and shower on the other. For shipping logistics, this structure was designed as two modules: the 16 ft. x 40 ft. main box, and a 10 ft. x 40 ft. bolt-on porch, which cantilevers into a dramatic landscape valley rich with vineyards, parklands, and the town of Santa Rosa.
The accompanying guesthouse (330 SF), also shipped essentially complete, is an abridged version of the primary structure. A large whitewashed oak wardrobe forms the bathroom wall while providing adequate storage and privacy.

Courtesy of Alchemy – Photography: Geoffrey Warner

Both structures feature steel frames, 9 ft. tall sliding glass walls that are set into custom corrugated weathering steel boxes. Pocket doors recessed into the cabinetry close against the steel columns. Privacy screens are pocketed into the bathroom ceilings, with glass walls separating the toilet and showering facilities. In the main house, there is also a 25’ long drop-down insect screen pocketed into the ceiling.

Courtesy of Alchemy – Photography: Geoffrey Warner

Oxidized weathering steel: The Sonoma weeHouse’s oxidized weathering steel cladding wraps each of the Sonoma weeHouse units, merging them with the environment of seasonal grasses and mature, gnarled coastal oaks. A custom brake in the cladding design provides a vertical texture and emphasizes the contrasting way the modules sit atop the horizontally banded, board-formed concrete plinths. Weathering steel was also used for the railings inside the porch. All steel on the concrete plinths is galvanized steel. Both sheets of steel need little to no maintenance and will weather into the landscape.
Project Info
Architects: Alchemy
Location: California, United States
Architect in Charge: Geoffrey C. Warner, AIA
Area: 970.0 ft2
Year: 2016
Manufacturers: Toto, Legrand, Big Ass Fans, Ikea, Metal Sales
Builder: Fidelity Builders, Inc.
Client and Design Collaborator: BJ Siegel
Mechanical Engineer: Jim Dunlevy, M&E Engineering
Interior Design: Alchemy
Specialty Steel: workAlchemy
Concrete Work: Marr B. Olson
Type: Residential
Photographs: Geoffrey Warner

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M6B2 Tower of Biodiversity | Edouard Francois

M6B2 Tower of Biodiversity | Edouard Francois

M6B2 Tower of Biodiversity

The relationship between building height and sustainability is a subject that currently occupies the minds of many city planners. This is because the city cannot expand infinitely into the landscape. In France, however, “village” urbanism seems to be adamantly resisting the vertical city, without truly considering its potential. One of the objectives of our project is to quell these hesitations.Benefiting from an exception to the 37-meter building height restriction in Paris, the tallest building of our project is 50 meters tall. Covered with plants from wild natural areas, our tower is a tool for seeding: it allows the wind to spread class one purebred seeds into the urban environment. Its height is a key element for its capacity to regenerate urban biodiversity. Its titanium cladding generates moiré patterns that give it a subtle, fluctuating character. The tower is thus not only a tool for neighborhood development but also a tool for development on a bigger scale as it distils a “green” aura to the Parisian cityscape.The landscaping strategy unfolds in three stages: first with rapidly climbing vines, later with conifer trees that develop in five to ten years, and lastly with slow-growth trees like oaks that develop in twenty years or more.

The green vegetal facade of the tower extends over the center of the block to the surrounding buildings. These smaller buildings are simpler, with metal facades in zinc and aluminum. They are placed at the corners of the block, allowing for the pedestrian to stroll through a calm, protected garden filled with low vegetation, as if outside of the city.Project Info
Architects : Edouard Francois
Location : Paris, France
year : 2016
Type : Residential/ Tower
Photographs : Pierre L’Excellent

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