Very Low Energy House Halle / HASA - Architecten
This very energy-efficient house (NEBverw 14,89 kWh/m²) is conceived as a series of interlocking, spacious rooms that, thanks to its meticulously placed windows, open up to its surroundings. Although designed for a dynamic 70-year-old, it is suited for a family of 4.
© Tim Van de Velde
Architects: HASA - Architecten
Location: Halle, Germany
Lead Architect: Bart Blancquaert
Area: 335.0 m2
Project Year: 2015
Photographs: Tim Van de Velde
Engineering: BALT Engineering
Energy Advisor: SVE Energy
© Tim Van de Velde
Text description provided by the architects. This very energy-efficient house (NEBverw 14,89 kWh/m²) is conceived as a series of interlocking, spacious rooms that, thanks to its meticulously placed windows, open up to its surroundings. Although designed for a dynamic 70-year-old, it is suited for a family of 4.
© Tim Van de Velde
The semi-detached house had to respect the volume of the neighbouring house, constructed 20 years earlier. To compensate for the rather low cornice that had to be respected, we made cut-outs in the roof surface to allow daylight to enter the bedrooms on the first and second floor.
Plan
Plan
For the exterior, we used neutral grey materials, providing a harmonising coherence with the neighbour, yet distinct enough to avoid triviality. Front and side facades were done in robust bricks, the r...
© Tim Van de Velde
Architects: HASA - Architecten
Location: Halle, Germany
Lead Architect: Bart Blancquaert
Area: 335.0 m2
Project Year: 2015
Photographs: Tim Van de Velde
Engineering: BALT Engineering
Energy Advisor: SVE Energy
© Tim Van de Velde
Text description provided by the architects. This very energy-efficient house (NEBverw 14,89 kWh/m²) is conceived as a series of interlocking, spacious rooms that, thanks to its meticulously placed windows, open up to its surroundings. Although designed for a dynamic 70-year-old, it is suited for a family of 4.
© Tim Van de Velde
The semi-detached house had to respect the volume of the neighbouring house, constructed 20 years earlier. To compensate for the rather low cornice that had to be respected, we made cut-outs in the roof surface to allow daylight to enter the bedrooms on the first and second floor.
Plan
Plan
For the exterior, we used neutral grey materials, providing a harmonising coherence with the neighbour, yet distinct enough to avoid triviality. Front and side facades were done in robust bricks, the r...
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