Marek Juhás
student
Faculty of Architecture and Design STU in Bratislava
Slovakia
Architecture
The project Umbra is a study of a single-family house situated in Rovinka, a suburban area near Bratislava characterized by dense residential development. The… more
Lin Hu
advisor
University of California, Berkeley
United States of America
Lin is an architectural designer at SCB. Holding a Master of Architecture from the University of… more
I really like the concept of carving out privacy in a busy neighbourhood. Your control of facade penetration and volume change is effective and thoughtful. The introduction of non-structural walls further strengthens this idea, by helping to frame key views through the window side. Also, your pencil-drawing expression of the concrete material gives a strong tactile sense of materiality.
As you move this design forward, it would be great to play more deliberately with the walls to reinforce your concept: you might define some walls as shear walls (structural), others as “wallumn” (a play on wall + column), and still others as interior partitions. By varying their roles you can create a spatial rhythm of walls throughout the building and design public/private space through wall distance and opening.
Right now all the walls on the open side align. Consider what happens when the view opens to the neighbouring buildings. You could extend the wall length or increase the wall height so that from the owner’s vantage point they see just a slice of sky (assuming you have clearance to the property lines). This kind of variation in wall geometry will reinforce your idea of privacy and control in the design.