Athentics plant. A paris : une maison en bois autour d'un patio. Construite autour d'une cour intérieure, cette maison à ossature bois en plein Paris est adossée à deux immeubles en pierre.
Elle s'insère naturellement dans le paysage et y apporte la touche de nature et de verdure tant convoitée dans les grandes villes. Noter cet article : Fiche technique Lieu : Paris Surface maison : 170 m² Surface terrain : N.C. Année de construction : 2006 Bois utilisés : Ossature bois Rencontre avec l'architecte Patrick Joubard "Après l'école Boulle et un BTS d'architecte d'intérieur, j'ai travaillé dans une agence d'architecture. A la place de cette construction en bois s'élevait initialement un atelier de dépôt de cartonnage. Le plan de la maison Le chantier Le premier étage de la maison est posé sur une dalle de béton auto-portante.
Si la toiture arrondie répond à un choix esthétique, elle a également permis la création d'une mezzanine et donc d'augmenter l'habitabilité de la maison. La maison en détail. Napoléon apartment by FREAKS freearchitects. French studio FREAKS freearchitects has renovated an apartment on the Rue de Rivoli in Paris, once the address of Napoleon I, so the architects decided to dress up as the former emperor for the photo shoot (+ slideshow).
"We're getting more and more bored by the nice shots where everything is so clean, with the perfect Scandinavian-design chair, the perfect white orchid, the perfect art book on the table," FREAKS freearchitects partner Guillaume Aubry told Dezeen. Over the course of the project, the architects learnt that Napoleon had been responsible for the construction of the street and that it was possible he'd lived in the apartment they were refurbishing. "Napoleon supposedly having lived there was a running joke among the building team and us," said Aubry.
"That's why we decided, the three of us, to sort of perform the photo shoot wearing Napoleon-style hats. " See more architecture and design in Paris » Photography is by David Foessel. Apartment refurbishment in Gràcia by Vora Arquitectura. Polished mosaic floors reveal the original room layout of this renovated apartment in Barcelona by local studio Vora Arquitectura (+ slideshow).
During the refurbishment Vora Arquitectura removed several existing walls, before constructing wooden partitions that would highlight the contrast between new and old structures. "We believe that refurbishment work must make the most of the existing elements," said architects Pere Buil, Jordi Fornells and Toni Riba. They added: "This is the case in the urban fabric, which is a conglomerate of different historical times. These different eras contaminate each other in a complex and ambiguous whole that can be touching. " Only some of the flat's colourful tiled floors were in good enough condition to be restored. "Although the pre-existence was not of exceptional historical or heritage value, it was perfectly reusable and attractive," said the architects. Above: floor plan Above: previous floor plan.
Metal Staircase by Francesco Librizzi Studio. A wireframe staircase leads to a new top floor inside this renovated apartment in Milan by architect Francesco Librizzi.
Before renovation the small apartment comprised just two rooms in a house built in 1900, but Librizzi was able to insert a mezzanine bedroom beneath the high ceilings. The staircase is made from 14mm-wide lengths of iron, which create ladder-like treads inside a rectilinear tower. For stability, the base of the staircase is screwed into the hexagonal concrete tiles that cover the floor. See all our stories about staircases » Here's some text from Francesco Librizzi: A very small apartment within a very “Milanese” building dated 1900. Windows, doors, and above all the floor tiles, had finishes and materials survived to another century: something precious to save as a resource for the new inhabitants of this space.
Apartment Refurbishment in Barcelona by M2arquitectura. Spanish studio M2arquitectura has renovated a Barcelona apartment by adding sliding partitions, bright green surfaces and furniture that folds out of the walls (+ slideshow).
The architects began by removing all the original partitions from the apartment, then divided the space into two halves that each feature green-painted screens. "We demolished all partition walls, reinforced the ceiling and floor framework and kept the structural walls," explained Meritxell Lázaro and Mischa Essletzbichler of M2arquitectura. "We built two green objects to separate atmosphere and functions. " ZBL House by Paritzki & Liani Architects. Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects has squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into the space between two existing properties in Tel Aviv (+ slideshow).
"A new building almost 'not present' from the outside is generated," Paola Liani and Itai Paritzki told Dezeen. "We tried to reinvent what is not present in this particular context and zone of the city - creating an intimate, rich, deep space overlooking a small garden. " The constrained site prevented the architects from giving the building many windows, so they added a long narrow skylight across the width of the roof to bring light down into both the ground and first floors. A first floor corridor lines up with this skylight and features a gridded metal floor that lets light filter through to the open-plan kitchen, living room and dining area below.