Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
This is a tale of two houses sitting on a sprawling piece of land, similar in looks, yet independent and finally coming together to form a coherent whole. What links these two units together is the huge central courtyard at the entrance expressed in an austere geometry of granite floor and wall, an organically shaped oculus and a minimalist planting of six willowy trees. Like a sparse yet artful Chinese landscape painting, this sets the tone for the rest of the location. The landscape design, similar to the house, can also be experienced in multiple correlated layers. Views are borrowed through cut outs and vistas, where sight lines and spaces begin to overlap.
The project takes its inspiration from the philosophy of the classical Chinese Garden, also for the bathrooms. The lines of the internal architecture contribute to a balanced composition where CEA collections fits in with consistency and elegance
Architecture: Farm Studio
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek
Photographer: Bryan Van Der Beek