GERM / Van Staeyen Interieur
"Woow, it is so much better than I could have imagined." That, with a big smile on their face, is a reaction I often get when the kids step into their new 'house'. Because that is what I like to create for them: a house within a house. A space in wich they feel home and safe. With a lot of coziness.Â
© Luc Roymans
Architects: Van Staeyen Interieur
Location: Willebroek, Belgium
Architect In Charge: johan van staeyen & wim clissen
Area: 50.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Luc Roymans
© Luc Roymans
"Woow, it is so much better than I could have imagined." That, with a big smile on their face, is a reaction I often get when the kids step into their new 'house'. Because that is what I like to create for them: a house within a house. A space in wich they feel home and safe. With a lot of coziness.Â
© Luc Roymans
Section
Kids long for that. Their own special place in which they can retrieve. This old mansion, dating from the beginning of the 20th century in a rural Belgian place, was spacious enough to design a high rising volume, the 'child-house'. This volume holds two beds and a top floor. It divides the room into three: left, right and a top-floor. The top floor can be a playing room while the kids are still young and a multimedia place when they turn teenager. Each bunkbed gives to their own...
© Luc Roymans
Architects: Van Staeyen Interieur
Location: Willebroek, Belgium
Architect In Charge: johan van staeyen & wim clissen
Area: 50.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Luc Roymans
© Luc Roymans
"Woow, it is so much better than I could have imagined." That, with a big smile on their face, is a reaction I often get when the kids step into their new 'house'. Because that is what I like to create for them: a house within a house. A space in wich they feel home and safe. With a lot of coziness.Â
© Luc Roymans
Section
Kids long for that. Their own special place in which they can retrieve. This old mansion, dating from the beginning of the 20th century in a rural Belgian place, was spacious enough to design a high rising volume, the 'child-house'. This volume holds two beds and a top floor. It divides the room into three: left, right and a top-floor. The top floor can be a playing room while the kids are still young and a multimedia place when they turn teenager. Each bunkbed gives to their own...
-------------------------------- |
|
Net Zero Home: Exploring Dynamic Open-Plan Living
30-04-2024 05:04 - (
architecture )
Hambud: Embracing Density and Openness
30-04-2024 05:04 - (
architecture )