Contemporary Black House Cambridge British Residential by Mole Architects
March 24th, 2010 - Posted in Architecture Design, contemporary design
Black House Sits Overlooking the Reclaimed Land
Cement Fibre Eternit Corrugated Cladding Black House Cambridge
Contemporary Black House is Raised off the Ground
Contemporary Black House Long and Thin
The Black House Cambridge British using Lightweight Structure
The house is clad in standard cement fibre Eternit corrugated cladding ubiquitous in the area painted black. This is set against stained Danish softwood windows larger on the Field west side with minimal glazing to the North. The plan of the house is long and thin with windows lining up at front and back to give rooms lit from both sides and a sense of the house being see-through. At the heart of the house on the ground floor is the kitchen or dining room circulation on the ground floor takes place through this room. Vertically a glazed stairway allows views through all three storeys.
Black House sits overlooking the reclaimed land of The Fens. It sits high in the landscape taking as a model the barns and houses that roll out over the flat land scattering the landscape like dice. The whole house is raised off the ground on brick clad concrete piers the piers are extensions of the piles below. The horizontal restraint of the piles is carried in a glulam beam sat on the piers and bolted down to the pile caps with high tensile steel rods dispensing with the need for cast concrete beams in the ground. The main structure is prefabricated timber panels using engineered timber studs and recycled newspaper insulation. This also allows the simple roof construction and the attic bedroom floor. The lightweight structure also meant that the number of piles in the foundations could be reduced. The windows are double glazed with argon filled cavities and a low-emissivity coating on the glass.
External sunscreens above the large ground floor windows cut out overhead mid afternoon sun in the summer. The first floor windows have a reflective coating on the outside of the glass and the rooflights are fitted with external sunscreens as well as internal blinds. The primary source of heat is via a heat pump which supplies the hot water and warmed fresh air. The air extracts in the bathrooms and kitchen and the fresh air valves are in the ceilings. The extract air passes through a cross- current heat exchanger to extract the energy and transfer it to the incoming fresh air which is then further heated by the heat pump. Mole Architects
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