Saturday, July 16, 2011

Sliding House by dRMM Architects, Suffolk, United Kingdom


Sliding House is a very interesting project by dRMM Architects. A new self-build house with guest annexe and a garage, designed for a rural site in Suffolk, East Anglia – a smallholding formerly characterised by bungalow, outbuildings and caravan arranged casually under a big sky.




The stringent local Planning parameters for rural development were accepted by the architect who shares with the client a genuine appreciation of vernacular farm buildings. After studying alternatives they agreed to use the local timber framed and clad 'shed' idiom but with a different approach. The straightforward and sophisticated client wanted a self-build house to retire to in order to grow food, entertain and enjoy the East Anglia landscape. The site offered a combination of rolling England and agricultural Holland, offering a set of parameters that appealed significantly to dRMM, always interested in systems, materials and unconventional architecture. The project was designed to be elaborated on and built by the client, an enterprising mathematician and motorcyclist, a maker capable of calculating the value of design and of risk.




The outcome: three conventional building forms, with unconventional detailing and radical performance. And a big surprise. A 28m linear building of apparent simplicity follows the requisite maximum 5.8m permitted width, 7.2m height is sliced into 3 programmes; 16m house, 5m garage and 7m annexe. The garage is pulled off axis to form a courtyard between slices of building. The 3 fixed buildings are further defined with distinct finishes; red rubber membrane and glass, red and black stained larch respectively. 




The linear composition is carefully sited on a level ridge that runs north/south along the north eastern boundary of the site. Thus the choreographed progression from road past annexe and garage, to house, glasshouse and then on to garden is a logical sequence. The bedroom/service half of the house is modular timber cassette construction, the living half a generic curtain wall glazing system. The annexe and garage are constructed from the modular timber cassette system with Scandinavian laminated section windows and doors.



The surprise is that these separated forms can be transformed by the fourth and largest element in the group, the 20 ton mobile roof and wall enclosure that traverses the site. This is an autonomous structure; steel, timber, insulation and unstained larch spanning hidden tracks, recessed into a concrete raft on piles. The mobile roof and walls form an insulating structure that passes over the annexe, house and glasshouse, creating combinations of enclosure, open-air living and framing of views according to position. 




Each element of the composition is carefully proportioned in relation to frame, window and wall sizes. All elements were prefabricated to be assembled on site, except groundworks, internal joinery fixtures and external surfaces, which were in situ. Movement is powered by hidden electric motors on 'bogeys' integrated into the wall thickness. Each of the 4 separate motors has its own pair of DC lorry batteries that are charged by mains or PV solar panels. The railway tracks are recessed into the external terrace on which the entire composition rests. The 6m gauge 'railway' is further disguised by stone paving joints and a linear drainage gully. This aligns the whole composition, obviates any roof gutters, and draws the visitor toward the garden beyond. The tracks could be extended in the future should the client wish to build a swimming pool that in turn may need occasional shelter.



Many people would like to live in a glasshouse for the sensation of being in a sheltered outdoors, but this is generally not practical. As a passive model a glasshouse is never comfortable: too hot or too cold; no privacy; little effective user-control unless one resorts to air conditioning, with the consequent implications for further energy use and ozone depletion, creating more volatile weather. The glass living area of Sliding House provides thermal comfort naturally, at almost no cost. Controlled solar gain occurs in the selection of the roof/wall position. This captures requisite heat according to season, and is backed up in combination with a ground source heat pump for cold periods. A wind turbine to power the heat pump and a wood burning stove (with under floor mechanically assisted flue) are in prospect when budget and planning authorities permit. To maintain insulation at roof level, all skylights are doubled-up giving effectively a quadruple glazed system. The principle can be run in reverse to achieve shade and cooling respectively.




Sliding House offers radically variable spaces, extent of shelter, sunlight and insulation. The dynamic change is a physical phenomenon difficult to describe in words or images. It is about the ability to vary or connect the overall building composition and character according to season, weather, or a remote-controlled desire to delight. The project has gathered lots of awards – no surprises there! It won the 2009 Riba East Award, the Grand Designs Awards 'Best New-Build' and 'Home of the Year' Award, plus it was Highly Commented at the House Category of the World Architectural Festival in 2009. 




from: http://blog.2modern.com (go check it out)

1 comment:

  1. The home was made so that the client could extend the slide of the house cover, should they wish to build a pool in the future and have cover. Fantastic.

    Architects in Suffolk

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