glazed openings punctuate tiefes haus’ black block facade in germany

.Tiefes Haus revisions split-level concept on slender plot in Dreieich On a narrow plot in Dreieich, Germany, encompassed through properties and also large plants, Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level concept of the original property, integrating existing walls in to a modern elongated property building. The ground floor is zoned through different flooring offsets, producing distinctive spatial adventures. Made by Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and also Marc Flick, the structure is slightly slowed down at the ground degree to determine the entrance.all photos through David Schreyer uniform dark facade visually merges Tiefes Haus’ concept Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) and also architect Marc Flick divide the inside into 2 main places attached by a two-story picture including considerable glazing.

The front section of our home features a visible format suiting the foyer, attendee area, and also vernissage space, with an open staircase providing straight accessibility to the top floor and basement. The kitchen and sitting room, using sights of the yard, lie in the rear part. The upper floor is organized into a little ones’s area and a resting location, attached through a cement path through the picture.

A continuous rooftop ties both sections with each other, both structurally and aesthetically. To stop overheating, the huge glass areas of the longitudinal facade are oriented northward. The layout contrasts floor-to-ceiling home windows and also oak indoor doors along with raw concrete surface areas as well as brightened terrazzo floor.

The homogeneous dark facade unifies the distinct home window layouts, producing a cohesive exterior aesthetic.Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level design on a narrow story in Dreieich, Germanylarge glass surface areas on the longitudinal exterior are oriented northward to prevent overheatingthe homogeneous darker front visually unifies the unique home window formats of the housefloor-to-ceiling windows contrast along with raw cement areas in the interior decoration.