
The site of this modern “V” shaped house is located nearby a natural park 20 miles NW of Barcelona, Spain. It is a magical place, surrounded by pine trees, oaks, and holm oaks and scented by the perfume of wild bushes and flowers. This Rembed house was designed by Quim Larrea y Katherine Bedwell with 1.717 square metre site area and 312sqm constructed area.
The peculiarity of the natural setting, the views of the valley and the functionality that the client demanded made us think of those Californian homes designed by Richard Neutra back in the 50’s.
The house is placed on the highest point of the site and it is resolved with the placement of two wings that form a V-shape plan. The house with a “V” shape plan had to be horizontal, tectonic, but at the same time friendly and respectful with the forest. It had to levitate on the site in order to simulate weightlessness.
The materials chosen "limestone, wood and steel" had to integrate well with the surroundings, and the color scheme was carefully studied, selecting sober and neutral tones that would blend smoothly with the site’s natural background setting.
The lot has a peninsula-shape and a slope with a Southwest orientation, and a street that surrounds it, except on the north side which limits with a neighboring site.
The program required for the house design needed to adapt itself to a young couple with two small daughters. They required comfort, functionality and transparency; this is why we decided to design fluid spaces that had a continuous relation with the exterior spaces of the house.
Due to the characteristics of the lot, the complexity of the project was to solve and define, with architectural elements, which were the public facades and which were the private ones. We decided to make two volumes to well define the most intimate part of the woods in order to keep it, as much as possible, away from the street.
The access to the house is through a pedestrian path that connects it to Santa Agnes Street, and parallel to it, the garage ramp is located. The foyer acts as the “rotula” or joint of the house from where two zones are distributed: night/day, public/private.
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Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Rembed House by Quim Larrea y Katherine Bedwell
Categories: Modern House, Natural House
NRGi Headquarters by SHL Architects

NRGi’s new corporate headquarters is situated in an area marked by a number of freestanding buildings in Dusager, Aarhus N, Denmark. NRGi Headquarters was designed by Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects with 5,067 sqm constructed area this project was completed in 2007. NRGi stands out from its neighbours in the surrounding area in virtue of its visually light, metallically gleaming built volume.
Distinguished by an angular and distinctive façade, the building forms a crisp contrast to the mellow, scenic context. Moreover, the building is situated and oriented so as to accommodate the path of the sun, and set at an angle so that it provides sun shading – hence, energy efficiency is built into construction design.
The interior echoes the dynamic tone of the façade. Three open horizontal plates are mutually displaced diagonally. With long lines of sight across the building and vertically up through the floors, the architecture creates visual transparency and facilitates contact between employees.
Small meeting pods and coffee points act as breakout areas and as spaces for informal exchanges. These innovative channels of communication are further enhanced by the vertical atrium – an energy conductor for communication in-house. With its characterful form and façade articulation the building provides its own landmark – a landmark for energy.
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Categories: Architecture


