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Architects: Brown & Brown Architects
- Area: 302 m²
- Year: 2020
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Photographs:Nigel Rigden
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Manufacturers: Hoxter, INTERNORM, Russwood, S.Anselmo
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Lead Architects: Andrew Brown
Text description provided by the architects. Our design is comprised of a timber and glass box, which is cantilevered above the landscape and sited on a stone wall that runs both inside and outside of the house. A simple materials palette helps the building blend into the landscape, while large expanses of South-facing glass allow the house to be central-heating free. A ruined outbuilding on the site will also be converted to a sauna building, offering fantastic views of Bennachie.
To provide a 'forever' home for a young family, with dedicated spaces for their interests, whether it be a book-lined snug that lines up with a view of a nearby hill or space in the flower floor for the hanging of game from hunting. The lower floor is masonry with Italian smoked clay bricks, while the first floor is Siberian Larch.
The building is heated via a large solar area, which feeds into a thermal store (also served by the water-heating wood-burning stove). Large areas of South-facing high-performing glass also provide passive solar gain, and the car brick wall, which runs inside / outside, provides thermal mass through the core of the building.
The hillside is scattered with the ruins of old cottages, and the client wished the placement of the new house to allow these to remain untouched. However, this left no space large enough for a house of the required size.
After mapping the site to determine the exact position of the ruins, we decided to create a building with a cantilevered upper floor, which could fit within the smaller footprint allowed by the existing ruins.