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[6-2005] |

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Site -
At Croton Reservoir in upstate New York, the hills tumble
right into the lake. Simultaneously soft and hard, rolling and jagged, the
lakefront alternates green patches with craggy, rocky formations. And built
into this landscape of leaf and rock and water will be a house--The Gypsy Trail
residence. Its ground floor, to be constructed of rough stone collected
on site, will be partially recessed into the hillside. Perched above the
stone base will be the cantilevered second floor. This box of steel, wood,
and glass will sit at an angle, twisted to procure a direct view of the lake and
to capture maximum sunlight. The sun's rays will enter through glass
planes integrated into a continuous wall-to-roof surface. Armature
- The
house's structural center resides in a generative
core that, although originating in the ground floor, achieves
its full form and function in the second floor. This core, the armature,
is a centrally located "smart structure" integrating kitchen, bathrooms,
fireplace, heating and cooling systems, and a central music system. The
morphing of the armature's programmatic elements produces a segmented, organic
shape. Yet the armature functions not only as an
infra-structural unit, but also as a circulatory and generative element, directing
interior movement and molding the surfaces connected to it. Its organic
shape distorts the geometry of the house as "pure box"; the roof above the
armature warps to conform to its segmentation. As the structure's hard
exterior surface responds to the generative force of the armature, the box softens,
tilts, and fragments. Architecture becomes a responsive medium--responsive
to the organic shapes and human forms and functions it houses. Where the roof
bends to meet the armature, glass planes take the place of the zinc roof in the
form of a continuous skylight. Where the glass bends over to become wall
at the end of the armature, a transparent shower room is suspended between the
trees. As the sun completes its arc through the sky, the armature collects
the sun's rays and channels them into various areas of the house. Here, architecture
proves itself responsive to both environmental regulators (cooling, heating) and
natural environments. Lounging
Voids- The design concept, reactive to the house's
siting, introduces a rotation of the second floor, which allows for better views
and privacy. Extended from the second floor is a cantilevering terrace,
connected to the living room. The second floor entrance has its own suspended
terrace, and upon entering the house the gaze is directed through a slot in the
kitchen wall, to the lake. On the second floor the living- and dining room,
the bedrooms, a sunroom, and an office are located, while the ground floor holds
a gymnasium, guest quarters, and a garage. The Ground floor has direct access
to the outside via a recessed, hidden path with a retaining wall built of site
rocks, one finds here an outdoor shower built in the rocks. The
architecture of the Gypsy House exemplifies the concepts of interdependent layers
(wall-glass-roof-glass-armature), efficiency of use (armature as infra-structural
core), and negotiation of means (interior/exterior, source of sunlight). Winka
Dubbeldam Project:
Gypsy Trail Residence Type:
3000 sq. ft. residence + 1500 sq. ft. guest house Location:
Upstate New York Status:
Completion date spring
2003 Architect:
Archi-tectonics Design
Architect Winka
Dubbeldam Principal in
charge Michael
Hundsnurscher Project Manager
Team: Rob Henderson Michael
Johnston Kajse Krause Ana
Zatezalo Tanja Bitzer Aaron
Brakke Philip Holley Sebastian
St. Jean Construction
Team: Buro Happold Consulting
Engineers Structural Engineers
Stanislav Slutsky, P.E.
Mechanical Engineers
T & L Construction
General Contractor
Israel Berger& Associates
Exterior Wall & Roofing Consultant
UAD Zinc
roofing, fenestration, railings LINKs: Gipsy
Trial Residence REPORTAGE L'architettura
č dinamica…. oppure no? (italian
version) Winka
Dubbeldam Is
architecture dynamic… or not? Winka
Dubbeldam Weather
Monitoring Station in Iceland Winka
Dubbeldam
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