Design

glazed positions accent tiefes haus' black brick facade in germany

.Tiefes Haus corrections split-level design on slim plot in Dreieich On a slim plot in Dreieich, Germany, neighbored by suites and huge trees, Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level style of the initial establishment, including existing wall surfaces into a modern-day extended non commercial structure. The ground floor is zoned through numerous floor offsets, developing distinct spatial experiences. Developed through Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) as well as Marc Flick, the building is a little set back at the ground level to define the entrance.all images by David Schreyer homogeneous dark exterior aesthetically merges Tiefes Haus' concept Henning Grahn Architektur (HGA) as well as designer Marc Flick split the interior right into two major regions connected through a two-story gallery including considerable glazing. The frontal segment of our home includes a visible format accommodating the foyer, attendee location, and vernissage room, along with an open staircase offering direct access to the higher floor and basement. The home kitchen as well as sitting room, giving sights of the garden, lie in the rear segment. The top floor is managed into a kids's place as well as a sleeping region, attached by a cement sidewalk by means of the gallery. A continual roofing system ties both sections together, both structurally and visually. To stop heating up, the large glass surface areas of the longitudinal facade are actually adapted northward. The style contrasts floor-to-ceiling windows as well as maple internal doors with raw cement surface areas as well as buffed terrazzo floor. The homogeneous black front merges the distinct window styles, making a natural outside aesthetic.Tiefes Haus reinterprets the split-level style on a narrow plot in Dreieich, Germanylarge glass surface areas on the longitudinal exterior are oriented northward to prevent overheatingthe uniform dark front visually consolidates the various window formats of the housefloor-to-ceiling windows contrast along with raw concrete areas in the interior design.

Articles You Can Be Interested In