Architecture

Villa V in T – Beel & Achtergael – Belgium

Villa V in T - Beel & Achtergael - Belgium
Villa V in T - Beel & Achtergael - Belgium

Villa V in T - Beel & Achtergael - Belgium

Project: Beel & Achtergael Architects

Description: Design of a detached single family house.

Date: 2006 – 2009

Status: realized

Procedure: assignment

Team preliminary design: Luce Beeckmans, Tine Bulckaen, Bram Seghers

Team final design: Axel Cayman

Team realization: Axel Cayman

Fixed furniture:  Desmet & Lammens Architecten

Landscape: Bureau voor Buitenruimten

Structure: VK Engineering

Techniques: Studiebureau Boydens

Photography: Filip Dujardin

Villa V in T is located in Flanders, Belgium, designed by Beel & Achtergael Architects. The client wished to have a home constructed for him where he could relax in a calming environment with privacy among his family and friends while enjoying his extensive art collection. Taking three years to construct, the residence was completed in 2009.

 From the architects: “The site for the building is on a mixed vernacular residential / light industrial street close to the clients companies offices. While the general surroundings at the rear of the plot are agricultural and offer a quiet perspective, there is considerable traffic at the front. In this project we therefore tried to create “a little world on its own” by arranging all dwelling quarters on the ground floor in a U-shape around an open air courtyard. On the inside of this shape a continuous glass wall opens the generous circulation and living rooms to this “heart”, the social core of the house.

 Designed for easy living, it is here that guests are invited to enjoy the light, space and art. To the outside the walls of the building are mostly closed however: smooth surfaces of white plasterwork, only sparsely punctuated with large windows where needed for the more intimate rooms that cradle the transparent inner space. The first floor is reserved for business and recreational seclusion: discrete volumes house an office and a media room and give shape to the silhouette of the house, their distinct windows catching north light and looking across the surrounding fields.”

You Might Also Like

No Comments

    Leave a Reply