Design

glazed openings punctuate tiefes haus' dark brick facade in germany

.Tiefes Haus alterations split-level design on slender plot in Dreieich On a slender plot in Dreieich, Germany, bordered through manors and huge trees, Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level layout of the authentic establishment, incorporating existing wall structures into a modern extended household structure. The first stage is zoned by means of several floor offsets, creating distinctive spatial adventures. Developed by Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and also Marc Flick, the structure is slightly slowed down at the ground level to determine the entrance.all images through David Schreyer homogeneous darker front aesthetically links Tiefes Haus' design Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and engineer Marc Flick partition the interior in to pair of main areas attached by a two-story gallery featuring extensive glazing. The frontal section of our home consists of an open design suiting the hall, guest region, and vernissage area, along with a visible stairs delivering straight accessibility to the higher flooring and cellar. The home kitchen as well as living-room, using views of the garden, are located in the rear segment. The higher flooring is organized into a children's place and a resting location, hooked up through a cement walkway with the picture. An ongoing roof ties the 2 sections together, each structurally as well as creatively. To prevent heating up, the sizable glass areas of the longitudinal front are actually adapted northward. The layout distinguishes floor-to-ceiling windows as well as oak indoor doors along with raw concrete areas and brightened terrazzo flooring. The homogeneous darker front combines the unique home window formats, making a logical outside aesthetic.Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level style on a narrow story in Dreieich, Germanylarge glass surface areas on the longitudinal front are actually adapted northward to avoid overheatingthe homogeneous black exterior visually consolidates the unique window layouts of the housefloor-to-ceiling windows contrast with raw concrete surface areas in the interior decoration.