The Greywall / YCL studio
A house that is recessed and hidden behind the continuous concrete wall. This wall becomes a part of the interior by creating the grey wall through the entire apartment and becomes a limit between common spaces and nature.
© Norbert Tukaj
Architects: YCL studio
Location: Vilnius, Lithuania
Architects In Charge: Tomas Umbrasas, Aidas Barzda, Tautvydas Vileikis
Area: 125.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Norbert Tukaj
© Norbert Tukaj
Text description provided by the architects. A house that is recessed and hidden behind the continuous concrete wall. This wall becomes a part of the interior by creating the grey wall through the entire apartment and becomes a limit between common spaces and nature.
Plan
© Norbert Tukaj
Plan
© Norbert Tukaj
By entering the house you meet all three materials used in the interior: ?the grey?, warm wood texture and ?the white?. ?The grey? becomes a path connecting second floor with the living space while the wood and white surfaces connect you with private areas on the second floor: master bedroom, two children rooms and bathroom. Same rule applies to the living space on the first floor - it feels that concrete wall passes through the interior space while everything else becomes neutral and creates conection between the dweller and the nature. Big windows give a light and shadow play on sunny days a...
© Norbert Tukaj
Architects: YCL studio
Location: Vilnius, Lithuania
Architects In Charge: Tomas Umbrasas, Aidas Barzda, Tautvydas Vileikis
Area: 125.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Norbert Tukaj
© Norbert Tukaj
Text description provided by the architects. A house that is recessed and hidden behind the continuous concrete wall. This wall becomes a part of the interior by creating the grey wall through the entire apartment and becomes a limit between common spaces and nature.
Plan
© Norbert Tukaj
Plan
© Norbert Tukaj
By entering the house you meet all three materials used in the interior: ?the grey?, warm wood texture and ?the white?. ?The grey? becomes a path connecting second floor with the living space while the wood and white surfaces connect you with private areas on the second floor: master bedroom, two children rooms and bathroom. Same rule applies to the living space on the first floor - it feels that concrete wall passes through the interior space while everything else becomes neutral and creates conection between the dweller and the nature. Big windows give a light and shadow play on sunny days a...
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