Design

glazed positions punctuate tiefes haus' black brick front in germany

.Tiefes Haus modifications split-level style on slender story in Dreieich On a slender story in Dreieich, Germany, bordered by rental properties as well as large trees, Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level design of the initial establishment, incorporating existing walls into a modern extended household property. The ground floor is actually zoned by means of different floor offsets, making distinct spatial knowledge. Created through Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and Marc Flick, the building is a little set back at the ground degree to describe the entrance.all pictures by David Schreyer homogeneous darker facade visually links Tiefes Haus' layout Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and also engineer Marc Flick divide the interior in to 2 main areas linked by a two-story picture featuring comprehensive glazing. The main area of our home consists of a visible layout suiting the hall, guest location, and also vernissage space, with a visible staircase giving direct accessibility to the upper flooring as well as basement. The kitchen area and also living room, providing views of the backyard, lie in the rear part. The top flooring is coordinated in to a kids's place and a resting place, attached by a concrete path via the picture. A continual rooftop ties the two sections all together, both structurally as well as visually. To stop heating up, the large glass surfaces of the longitudinal front are actually adapted northward. The concept distinguishes floor-to-ceiling home windows and maple internal doors with raw concrete surfaces and buffed terrazzo floor. The uniform black front merges the different window formats, producing a cohesive outdoor aesthetic.Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level design on a narrow plot in Dreieich, Germanylarge glass surfaces on the longitudinal facade are actually oriented northward to prevent overheatingthe uniform black exterior aesthetically unifies the various home window formats of the housefloor-to-ceiling home windows comparison along with raw cement areas in the interior decoration.