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Misc: Printmaker's Solar House
Physical Object by Mathew and Ghosh Architects (MGAPL) and Saumitro Ghosh, Principle Architect
This is a house that was built around two important requirements. Firstly it had to serve as an artist’s studio for printmaking in part of the house. Secondly, it had to be a self-sufficient house in that it would use the energy of the sun to power the pumping of water, night illumination, heating water and mechanical ventilation.
© MGAPL.
+ Bangalore, India …
+ Categorisation: Publications: Imprints and Media (primary)…The house located on the outskirts of the city near a marshy lake at the foot of a small hill with hardly any development around, became a place to understand the definition of the contemporary (sub) urban house specific to the way of life of its inhabitants. The house organizes itself largely into a linear block - an anchor in the shifting marshy background and the uncertainties of suburbia. The place for worship is expressed distinctly as a vertical point that moves slightly out of the place of the linear configuration, around which one partly circumscribes as one enters the house. In a gesture that seeks to reconstruct the severed house-street relationship synonymous with the growing isolation of the urban family), the street deck predominantly leans over to the street edge in a vestigial longing. The long block that holds the spaces for living and the artist's studio, is penetrated by light that differentiates and modulates spaces. The long block connects to the deck, which contains the car parking and kitchen below. The prayer block at this pivotal location is washed by the morning light and is separated from the main block and the deck physically with light.
- The main block flows out linearly into the side court - this becomes the extension of the living space which offers the privacy and the pleasure of being in the protection of the house and yet being able to be in the garden. The house is one's own world for living, work and rest.
- The hovering roof of the long block takes a profile that lifts at the North side on the upper level to bring North light into the artist's studio. This offers a 5 degrees slope to the South for the photovoltaic solar cell panels to catch most of the sun during the day. The roof is structurally supported at critical points from within the long block. Transparency from the studio towards the spaces of the house is maintained through glass partitions between the roof and the walls. The opening up of the top edges of the room in different places especially the study makes it feel like a semi-covered space that is filled with gentle natural light throughout the day.
- The landing becomes a library and reading space, which connects the upper and lower levels to the street deck in front. The intermediate location of this space is a transition between the private spaces of the bedrooms, the studio and the over-looking space of the dining and living areas.
- The studio is a self-sufficient unit that has its own facilities for printmaking such as an acid basin in the balcony outside, a private access to the ground floor. The light filling the space gives it the aspect of a work place that can shut itself off from the house if required.
- The low lying land had to be filled and a column beam structure supports the entire structure which offered the possibility to cantilever, open up large areas for light and air.
mga-hsh-1.pdf - Download Printable [PDF]
A2 size, printable [04 MB] Adobe PDF file
mga-hsh-1.pdf - Download Printable [PDF]
A2 size, printable [05 MB] Adobe PDF file