The luminous contemporary home was designed by OFIS Architects in 2015.
Villa Criss-Cross Envelope by OFIS Architects:
“The Villa is located in the Mirje Suburbs within the city center
of Ljubljana, Slovenia. The street of the villa runs perpendicular to
the ancient Roman Wall and continues into a pedestrian passageway under
the stone pyramid designed by Plecnik (as part his reconstruction
project along the wall). The Villa’s new structure embeds an existing
retaining wall along the street front. By incorporating the wall as part
of the new construction, the new house keeps original position on this
street in an axial alignment to the pyramid.
The external structure is composed of a cube volume and
perforated metal envelope. The volume extracts cut-outs to create
pockets of space that provide a pyramidical stepping down along the
roof, a void along the entrance and private glass patios with terraces
for living areas of the house. Using a material with holes on both sides
aims to make an abstract interpretation of the texture of classical
villas in the historical suburb. The rough classical façade was
represented with double perforated panels; the task was to achieve
texture through the illusion of depth which allows a light presence and
enhances the shadows and reflections off a palette of beige tints. The
three-dimensional texture creates a dynamic abstraction while
encapsulating its coherent volume. Diagonal crosses act as a functional
and graphic representation. The crosses brace the frames of panels and
create identity like façade ornaments on historical citizen villas
internal volume embodies two elements: exposed structural
concrete walls and a wooden shell. The project required a residence for a
single family with three children. The brief was to maximize living
area with minimum of the service space. The concept divides space based
on distinct program by separating function not by walls but floor
levels: ground floor is living/communal space, first floor is children
area and second floor parents area. With no cellar, the shell is
integral to provide all of the space for storage. The flush walls fold
out to house cupboards, shelves and drawers throughout the living areas
and furniture such as beds, seating and counters are built into the
floor in order to optimize space and provide easy maintenance. This
connects different spaces in the house by giving a common function to
partitions.”
Photos by: Tomaz Gregoric
Source : homedsgn.com
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