From certain angles, the house resembles the gable-roofed cottages in the Swiss village of Riedikon, which dates back at least to the early 8th century, on the lake known as Greifensee, near Zurich. Come closer and you realize this house, with its pitched, tentlike roof, its strip window following the angled roofline, and its enclosing screen of 315 vertical spruce slats, rough sawn on the sides and CNC-milled on the front and back, is nothing like its neighbors. The 3,175-square-foot house, designed by Zurich firm Gramazio & Kohler Architecture and Urbanism, is a reinterpretation of the regional typology that, as the firm’s principal Matthias Kohler explains, “parametrically adapts form to context.”
The program was simple enough — a two-bedroom, two-bath house for a young family with one small child. The polygonal volume is intended to blend in with neighboring structures and provide generous, contemporary, adaptable spaces, including a ground floor atelier with a separate entrance for an art studio. Although the brief remained constant throughout the design process, the architects found obtaining building permits for the open, light-filled spaces a challenge. “According to the building laws of the region, the maximum window size is 16 square feet, except for the exits to the garden,“ says Kohler. But, he adds, “he design of the slatted exterior allowed the screen to be legally interpreted as a wood facade, allowing large windows behind the wooden veil.”
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