The
shore along the Sarnersee is characterized by terracing and embankments
which support the steep shore. These topographical conditions have been
repeated in the interior of the house. For Atelier Scheidegger Keller,
they were the starting point for their design concept: a single large
space is zoned through three slightly offset floor areas which
simultaneously maintain the open feeling of the space and create a
division into different functional areas. The upper terrace serves as
kitchen and dining room; the middle one as a living room, and the lowest
as a bedroom. Hidden beneath the kitchen, there is a bathroom.
The
terraced space is completely surrounded by glazing, making the
mountains, lake and landscape part of the interior. A large, tent-like
roof seems to float above the house, creating an “open and composed,
heavy and light, high and broad” effect. The broad roof is covered in
folded rhombic sheets leading to the slender eaves. Thanks to these
jutting eaves, the view from the house has a wide horizon, as does the
surface of the water.
The
roof was created from prefabricated concrete elements and mullions cast
in in-situ concrete. Two Y-shaped supports whose shape results from the
constructive and geometrical structure of the roof function as the only
connection to the floor. Furthermore, these sculptural supports, which
continue the geometrical pattern created by the roof, form the only
spatial orientation in the entire one-room building. The visible joists
and negative spaces of the roof’s underside are reminiscent of the
roof’s design and create a larger-than-life ornamental covering for the
whole interior.
The
sleek, simple exterior of the house surprises visitors with its unusual
spatial treatment, which was determined as much by topography as by
structural considerations. Terracing and a visible support structure
reveal a complex single-room solution complemented by the two
dominating, sculptural Y-supports. Focus on the most significant
building components means that architecture and landscape are an
ever-present feature, even in the interior of the house.
Project data
Team: Christian Scheidegger, Martin Kugelmeier
Civil engineering: Monotti ingegneri consulenti SA, Locarno
Fotography and film: Karin Gauch & Fabien Schwartz
Fotography construction site: Atelier Scheidegger Keller
Team: Christian Scheidegger, Martin Kugelmeier
Civil engineering: Monotti ingegneri consulenti SA, Locarno
Fotography and film: Karin Gauch & Fabien Schwartz
Fotography construction site: Atelier Scheidegger Keller
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