Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews

Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, Beam, ChairErika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, BeamErika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 4 of 36Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 6 of 36Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - More Images+ 31

Albisheim, Germany
  • Architects: Piertzovanis Toews
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  285
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Simone Bossi
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  ADLER, Huguet, Velux, Xella
  • Lead Architects: Heinrich Toew, Ioannis Piertzovanis
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Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, Beam, Chair
© Simone Bossi

Text description provided by the architects. Almost four years ago, we started an experiment. Erika and Willi had bought a barn, willing to carry out a major alteration by themselves. The financial means for the conversion were limited, as were the owner's craft skills. A sensitivity for architectural issues could not be assumed. For both, the owner and the architects, this project has been an intense yet rewarding journey.

Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 10 of 36
© Simone Bossi
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, Beam
© Simone Bossi
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 33 of 36
Longitudinal Section

Located in a village surrounded by vineyards of Riesling and Chardonnay, the barn grew into an ensemble around an old mill from the 18th century. Although it has been altered several times, its overall layout remains largely intact, showcasing thick stonewalls, oak framework and clay roof tiles. The renovation process began with a careful sandblasting of the wood, revealing its original grain and hue, and learning about the different grades of quality and damage within the structure.

Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 8 of 36
© Simone Bossi
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, Chair, Beam
© Simone Bossi

The L-shaped room under the huge roof was originally used to store hay. This central space retains its height differences and the warped roof trusses. It is now characterized by four differently colored houses in the house - the yellow loggia, which appears like a glass house on the inside, but whose interior belongs to the outside space; the green kitchen, which occupies a separate area; the pale red stairhouse and the lilac glass walkway to the courtyard. The new bedrooms are located at the two far ends of the L, leaving the central big space completely open. As the barn is a listed building, new openings were hardly possible. Natural light fills the room mainly through the new skylight that stretches along the whole length of the building. Inner windows, larger than the existing openings allow the rough old brickwork to become part of the interior atmosphere.

Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, Bathroom
© Simone Bossi
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography
© Simone Bossi
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 30 of 36
Ground Floor Plan
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Interior Photography, Dining room, Table, Chair, Beam
© Simone Bossi
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 36 of 36
North Elevation
Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 25 of 36
© Simone Bossi

Other than the heating and the windows, every single step was carried out by the owners themselves, based on carefully prepared illustrated step-by-step manuals. Confusions, sometimes almost reminding of Buster Keatons chaotic self-building slapstick »One Week« were part of the game. But even if they seem to be inherent in such a build-after-instruction process, it turned out that with time and patience a luckier outcome than the destructive ending of the movie has been possible. From laying the first quarry stones centuries ago to photographing and manually printing the images, the process has been a celebration of handcraft, highlighting its irregularities and cracks shaped by time and hand.

Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews - Image 26 of 36
© Simone Bossi

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Cite: "Erika and Willi’s Barn / Piertzovanis Toews" 07 Oct 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1021942/erika-and-willis-barn-piertzovanis-toews> ISSN 0719-8884

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