Blog : LIVING

Kampong House: The Allure of Indonesia’s Urban Village Life

Kampong House: The Allure of Indonesia’s Urban Village Life

/ Cimahi, Indonesia /

/ Story: Nawapat Dusdul / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Mario Wibowo /

For an Indonesian family, life in an urban kampong is a beautiful journey. Aquino Krishadi and Elis Rosmiati lived for some time in a medium-density urban village. The positive feeling that they cherished was brought with them as they moved into their new home in Cimahi, roughly ten minutes’ drive from Bandung Metropolis in West Java.

Kampong House

The chic new home is designed by Ismail Solehudin, of Ismail Solehudin Architecture. Reflecting the Indonesian kampong experience, the siding materials that enclose and divide interior living spaces are made of rigid PVC sheets mixed with brick masonry. It’s a creative way to build, plus it provides excellent toughness and good moisture resistance.

The term kampongs, also spelled kampoongs, or kampungs, refers to traditional villages with stilt houses in the Indonesian archipelago.

Made for living green in a small space, the new dwelling is aptly named “Kampoong-In-House” for its character and real certain appeal of village life that provides the architect and the family with invaluable inspiration. In essence it’s an intriguing combination of features with rooms and a network of passageways beautifully fitting together in a house plan.

Kampong House

Sharing his points of view, Ismail said that the design was based on the client’s experience from having lived in an urban village, plus their interest in a sustainable way of living, albeit in a small space.

To comply with the family’s wishes, he translated their ideas into a coherent distribution of masses and expertly crafted a house plan capable of bringing many benefits, including convenient and safe exterior and interior traffic patterns.

Kampong House

Kampong House

Kampong House

The front of the house features an eclectic mix of items and decorations ubiquitous among urban kampongs across Indonesia. They include different textures and materials that come together in an untidy way like a picture of a village scene.

Among them are ornaments such as window box planters, skylights, garden areas and unfilled spaces in the wall that drive natural ventilation keeping the interior living spaces cool and comfortable.

Kampong House

Kampong House

Commenting on a hybrid of brickwork and PVC sheets, Ismail said that PVC is strong and durable, which explains why it’s one of the most widely used thermoplastic polymers worldwide. Here, it’s used on the façade to protect against damage from too much sun and rain.

Meantime, exposed brick walls provide great opportunities to experiment with various textures and patterns. The break in the wall allows fresh air to enter and circulate inside, a perfect solution for houses in a Tropical climate.

Kampong House

Kampong House

Walk in the door, and you come to an open concept common area with greenery that’s the essential part of the house plan. It conveniently connects to a plant-filled living room, kitchen, and a large backyard garden.

In all places, unfilled spaces in the wall and green areas create microclimates that differ from those in the surrounding areas. Plus, they allow natural light and improve air circulation at the same time.

Kampong House

Kampong House

Kampong House

Kampong House

Kampong House

Bedrooms are slightly hidden from view, cocooned in a comfortable location. They are reachable via an interior corridor lined with functions that serve practical purposes, among them a bar table and a few bookshelves.

Kampong House

Kampong House

All things considered, it’s a chic contemporary home thoughtfully devised to promote social interactions among family members without intruding into the lives of one another. At the same time, it’s made for a lifestyle that tries to reduce the use of natural resources.

The message is clear. Living sustainably in an urban kampong is more than just helping the environment. It’s also a way to bring people back in time and experience the Indonesian way of life like it’s always been.

Kampong House

Kampong House

Kampong House

Kampong House

The House Plan & Section Courtesy of Ismail Solehudin Architecture


Architect: Ismail Solehudin of Ismail Solehudin Architecture


You may also like…

Turning a Cold 20-Year-Old House into a Bright and Airy Tropical Home

Renovation Adds Sunny Personality to “Nobita House”

SCOPE Promsri Condominium; Feeling Good Living Better World Class Real Estate in the Heart of Sukhumvit

SCOPE Promsri Condominium; Feeling Good Living Better World Class Real Estate in the Heart of Sukhumvit

BANGKOK / Designed to improve the quality of life, SCOPE Promsri sits on a prime residential lot in the heart of Sukhumvit, one of Bangkok’s vibrant cosmopolitan areas. Among its most outstanding features is the integration of the high-end contemporary furniture brand Ligne Roset of France with the overall design of every room and common area. A nexus between well thought-out design, best appliances brands and urban lifestyle conveniences, the 1.35-billion-Baht eight-story condo comes complete with a security system that exceeds standards for residential property management.

SCOPE Promsri

SCOPE Promsri is conveniently situated on Soi Promsri, a prime street that connects with three famous city thoroughfares; namely Soi Prompong (Sukhumvit 39), Soi Klang (Sukhumvit 49), and Soi Thonglor (Sukhunvit 55). The intention is to become a premium residential project capable of providing its residents with a world class service.

SCOPE Promsri

What makes SCOPE Promsri exceptionally good is the overall interior design paired with matching contemporary furniture by Ligne Roset, a high end brand that has been around for more than 160 years. Founded in 1860, Ligne Roset grew from humble beginnings and transformed itself into a successful furnishings outfit with branches across the globe. Over time, modern luxury furniture and decorative accessories have earned the company a reputation as experts in design and innovative manufacturing processes. The secret to its success lies in strict quality control that culminates in unique products that are not only handsome and comfortable, but also a profusion of elegance and value characteristic of French design.

SCOPE Promsri

Yongyuth Chaipromprasith is creative expert in real estate development and CEO of the SCOPE Co, Ltd, which specializes in homes at the international premium level. He said: “We commit ourselves to providing quality and innovative design that has been our signature from day one. Every project that we’ve accomplished are the product of collaborations between us and other experts in the field, including world famous brands. When it comes to home furnishings, it’s not about selecting products from catalogs. Rather, it’s an act of working with others who have comprehensive knowledge and skill in a bid to create products that are evidence of quality and best express our ideas.”

SCOPE Promsri

By this is meant that SCOPE Promsri places great emphasis on the individual’s privacy and freedom from being disturbed by others. Hence, there are only two business units, compared to 146 residential condominium units on the premises. First and foremost, it’s designed to raise the quality of life and improve safety for the project’s residents. This is evident in the installation of water sprinklers in the ceiling of every room, despite it not being required by law governing eight-story buildings.

That’s not all. At SCOPE Promsri every condominium comes complete with modern conveniences and household appliances that comply with standards. They include electrical kitchen appliances by the MIELE brand of Germany, plus built-in combinations consisting of a microwave oven, induction cook top, kitchen exhaust fan, and built-in Liebherr brand refrigerator, as well as wall-mounted washlets by Kohler, Germany.

SCOPE Promsri

Apart from the full complement of world class equipment, every condo unit receives a great deal on decoration known as “Promsri Edition Fully Furnished Package”, an 890,000-Baht value that includes, among other things, a Prado sofa by Christian Werner. Customers are allowed to choose more than one color for the sofa. Plus, there’s a special edition table code named “Promsri Table”, which is manufactured exclusively by Ligne Roset for this project only. And that’s not all. The list also includes a built-in console that comes with a 75-inch TV set, bed with headboard decorating ideas and mattress by Simmons, the world class brand that’s used by six star hotels across the globe.

SCOPE Promsri

Strictly speaking, the Promsri Edition is more than just a list of household equipment or furniture. Rather, it opens the door to a new lifestyle evolving around feeling good and living better ideas. It’s about nurturing quality thoughts that culminate in good design for homes at the international premium level.

Yongyuth added: “SCOPE Promsri has invested a lot of money to create a good first impression with the project’s exterior design. But the quality that pleases the aesthetic senses alone isn’t enough. That’s why we also place great emphasis on long term durability and ease of maintenance. This is evident in the use of reflective glass acoustic film that not only protects resident privacy, but also reduces heat transfer from outside, thereby saving on energy consumption. Plus, it doubles as sound barrier that reduces street noise by as much as 30%, a feature that’s further enhanced by motorized blackout blinds for added indoor thermal comfort. It’s designed to achieve total darkness in the room, especially for customers in the young international premium group who requires the highest quality of rest. This is particularly important for the so-called work-hard, high-income group.”

“SCOPE gives good living conditions the highest priority. For this reason, it provides a variety of services including safe transport of food items and cleaning service. It’s a luxury condo that not only allows pets, but also is truly pet friendly. By enforcing carefully thought-out rules and regulations, it ensures that pet owners and non-pet owners can live together in harmony.”

SCOPE PromsriSCOPE Promsri SCOPE Promsri

SCOPE Promsri condos complete with the “Promsri Edition Fully Furnished Package” are on sale now for 6.3 million Baht apiece. The scheduled finish date is around November 2022. Unit reservation has begun as of 12 March 2021. Register now at www.scopepromsri.com

SCOPE Promsri

303 House: A Narrow Townhome Inspired by Aircraft Interior

303 House: A Narrow Townhome Inspired by Aircraft Interior

/ Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam /

/ Story: Nawapat Dusdul / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Quang Tran /

An architectural practice called “Sawadeesign Studio” has applied innovative aircraft cabin ideas to give this narrow townhome a complete makeover. The small family home sits sandwiched between two low-rise buildings in the heart of Tan Binh, an urban district of Ho Chi Minh City. They named the project “303 House.”

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

Narrow townhomes are a typical housing type omnipresent throughout central Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon. By law, places of residence with a narrow frontage to the street (smaller than 3 meters across, to be exact) are not permitted to have more than one level.

In this particular case, the only way to build is arrange all the usable spaces and functions on the same horizontal plane. And the result is a renovation done right in every sense of the word.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

From the outside looking in, the entire width of the house is only 2.9 meters. With the exterior walls installed, the inside space comes to just 2.7 meters wide.

Interestingly enough, well-thought-out design turns an awkward narrow plot into a single-story home that’s simple with all useable spaces giving off good vibes. The bright and airy home occupies less than 90 square meters of land.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

The design duo, Doan Si Nguyen and Vo Thanh Phat, decided against the most commonly used construction technique. They proposed an alternative method aimed at reducing the amount of concrete used, an option that risked being rejected by investors from the get-go.

For indoor thermal comfort, the ceilings are made of Rockwool tole about 150 mm thick. The coated sheet metal is widely used in the storage industry and large warehouses for its excellent thermal insulation. Here, it’s used to make the interior living spaces comfortable day and night.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

The contemporary home interior features mixed materials. Among them, grey plaster on the wall proves a perfect complement to gray epoxy paint on the floor. Together, they provide desirable elements for a calm, peaceful home. Everywhere, furniture made of plywood is a great way to add natural touches to the interior.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

As the architects put it, the secret to creating a healthy indoor environment lies in putting multiple layers of functional spaces in neat order to shield the home from the busy street outside. This is especially true in HCMC, where many homes are prone to suffer from the negative effects of outside noise and unrestricted growth of housing areas and commercial development.

Fascinatingly, aircraft cabin ideas came in handy for the townhome built on an extremely long and narrow plot of land. It’s reminiscent to walking along an aisle between rows of seats on an aircraft.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

There’s a paved outdoor area in front of the house entrance that provides a place to socialize. Step inside, and you come into a corridor connecting to a living area, kitchen, and laundry room. Wall-mounted storage cabinets line one side of the aisle, with beautifully organized functional spaces on the other.

There are two bedrooms with a bathroom attached tucked away in a quiet place half way down, plus a third bedroom at the rear of the house accessible by a small corridor. Where appropriate, clear roofing materials provide light for houseplants, while openings in the rooftop drive air circulation keeping the interior cool and comfortable without air conditioning.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh CityModern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City

The house plan is not only tailored to the specific needs of a family of three, but it’s also a well-thought-out place of abode amid the hustle and bustle of the city.

As is often the case with most urban areas, for homeowners there’s a tendency to rent out the space in front of their houses to small retailers and businesses. But the family living at 303 House doesn’t need that kind of income. They prefer to keep the door closed and enjoy privacy in the comfort of their home. Albeit small, it’s an oasis of calm — a home sweet home no doubt.

Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City Modern House / Modern Skinny House on a Narrow Lot in Ho Chi Minh City


Architect: Sawadeesign Studio (www.sawadeesign.net)

Lead Architects: Doan Si Nguyen and Vo Thanh Phat


You may also like…

Mash-up: Industrial Design and Green Space of Walllasia

3 x 9 House: A Compact Renovated Row House in HCMC

Villa Sati: A Country Retreat Breathes in the Energy of Nature

Villa Sati: A Country Retreat Breathes in the Energy of Nature

EN / MM

/ Nakhon Ratchasima, Thailand /

/ Story: Samutcha Viraporn / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Soopakorn Srisakul /

Here’s an intimate country villa peacefully nestled in the wooded hills of Nakhon Ratchasima. The big mountains of Khao Yai National Park that’s a UNESCO World Heritage site can be seen from miles around. The house that merges into countryside vernacular offers an unbroken view of sugarcane fields and, beyond, the scenic beauty of islands in the sky. 

The breezy and bright house in the fields belongs to Thanachai Ujjin, aka Pod, lead singer/song writer for the Moderndog band. To him this means everything. It’s a place to live al fresco and enjoy the benefits of fresh air and sunshine away from the hustle and bustle of city life.

His favorite hangout is a gallery along the side of the house, where he likes to sit under moonlight at 2 in the morning. Precisely, nature is on his doorstep.

The house plan is symbolic of modern Tropical architecture. It’s spacious, calm and uncluttered. Here, the atmosphere is so peaceful that Thanachai himself likens it to that of a far away temple. It’s the brainchild of Nattapak Phatanapromchai, of Erix Design Concepts Co., Ltd, an architectural practice based in Bangkok.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

The minimalist place of abode is aptly named “Villa Sati”, or the House of Consciousness, so as to communicate the state of being fully awake and aware of oneself and one’s surroundings. Shining under the moonlight and starry skies, it has a spacious gallery along the outside of the house that’s perfect for walking meditation, which the artist and his Mom often do together.

Sharing his little piece of paradise, Thanachai said: “After moving out here, I feel as if there were more hours in the day. I rise early to go jogging, read, listen to music, and write songs.”

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

As one would expect, their country retreat is made for peaceful, simple living. Here, the artist and his Mom have plenty of time for their favorite pastimes – make art. And the house plan is thoughtfully devised to do exactly that.

Seen from a distance, gable roof design proves a perfect complement to the loggia along the outside of the building overlooking the garden. Elsewhere, gorgeous open-concept floor plans increase natural light and bring the outdoors into the home.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country VillaPod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

Walk in the door, and you find the stand-alone Butterfly Stool, a 1954 icon of Japanese industrial design by Sori Yanagi. A short distance away, a minimalist bedroom looks out over the sugarcane fields stretching as far as the eye can see. Straight ahead is a kitchenette that connects to a living area large enough for several purposes.

For lighting and good ventilation, a set of stairs next to dark clapboard siding has no risers between the treads. It provides access to the attic that the artist has turned into a bedroom. The farthest end of the house is open to let southeasterly winds enter, a great way to ventilate the entire home. From here, the rolling sugarcane fields and mountains beyond can be seen in full view.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country VillaPod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

To create a flexible interior space, movable furniture comes in handy to establish zones and enhance traffic flow in the home. Modular storage cabinets from USM have the most prominent position alongside wall-mounted abstract art by Tae Pavit and a few painted pictures by Pod’s Mom.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country VillaPod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

Commenting on design details, architect Nattapak said the gallery along the outside of the house affords a beautiful panorama of the lush mountain landscape.

At the same time, large openings in the walls allow fresh air to enter, creating air flow and bringing down ambient temperatures to the point there’s no need for air conditioning.  Plus, the gable roof with extended overhangs effectively protects the gallery along the outside from sun and rain.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country VillaPod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

To add rustic charm to the home, the architect did away with the fascia, or the wooden boards covering the far ends of roof rafters. It’s a technique to highlight the framework supporting the roof as is often the case with the Thai style of residential architecture.

At the same time, wood shingles covering the roof are made beautiful by special paint for a real custom effect, while cement board sheathing is installed underneath to protect against leaks.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country VillaPod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

The building’s structural framing for the most part consists of wood, while framed glass wall systems stand tall from the threshold to the tie beam supporting the roof truss. For a neat appearance, the side posts of every doorway and glass wall frame perfectly align with gable-end studs. The result is a beautiful country villa with clean design in the midst of scenic surroundings.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country VillaPod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

For strength and durability, the house superstructure is built of Ta-khian timber (scientific name: Hopea odorata), a species of large trees native to Southeast Asia. Elevated 1.80 meters above ground level, the floorboard rests on steel reinforced concrete framing that serves as load-bearing foundations.

Technically speaking, the house-on-stilts design is ubiquitous across countries in the Tropical climate. It provides good ventilation under the floor, a brilliant way to keep the home cool all year round. By and large, it looks the epitome of traditional Thai house design, one that’s easy to look at and comfortable to live in.

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

The homeowner wrapped it up nicely. “I like the relative smallness of the house and surrounding open spaces. They’ve had a significant impact on human minds. For me, it gives vitality and enthusiasm.

“It’s a kind of design that fills my life with laughter and inspires exciting new ideas. It just so happens. Once I have an idea that I think has real potential, the rest is easy. Lyrics for a number of songs were written right here in this humble abode of mine. The wide open spaces of the countryside are hugely rewarding for me as an artist.”


Architect: Nattapak Phatanapromchai of Erix Design Concepts


You may also like…

Grandpa’s New Single-Storey House at the Water’s Edge

Mountains, Shady Trees and a Riverside Home

သဘာဝတရား၏စွမ်းအင်ကိုရှူရှိုက်ရာ ကျေးလက်အိမ် (Burmese Version)

သဘာဝတရား၏စွမ်းအင်ကိုရှူရှိုက်ရာ ကျေးလက်အိမ် (Burmese Version)

EN / MM

သဘာဝတရား၏စွမ်းအင်ကိုရှူရှိုက်ရာ
ကျေးလက်VILLAအိမ်

 

ရင်းနှီးဖော်ရွေတဲ့ ကျေးလက်ဒေသက ဒီအိမ်လေးက ခေါင်ယိုင်အမျိုးသားဥယျာဉ်ရဲ့ စိမ်းမြမြသစ်တောတွေနဲ့ ကြံခင်းတွေရဲ့ရှုမြင်ကွင်းနဲ့ ပနံတင့်နေပါတယ်။
Moderndog ဂီတအဖွဲ့ရဲ့အဆိုတော်/သီချင်းရေးသူဖြစ်တဲ့ “ပေါ့ဒ်”ထနာချိုင်အော့ဂျင်က နားခိုရာအိမ်လို့ခေါ်တဲ့ ဒီအိမ်က နံနက်ခင်းတွေမှာ မြူနှင်းတွေရစ်သိုင်းနေတတ်တဲ့ တောင်ရှုခင်းလေးထဲမှာ တည်ရှိနေတာပါ။
သူရဲ့အနှစ်သက်ဆုံးနေရာက အိမ်အပြင်ဘက် ကပြင်နေရာကျယ်ဖြစ်ပြီး လသာညတွေမှာ နံနက် ၂နာရီလောက်ထိ ထိုင်နေချင်တဲ့နေရာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ သဘာဝတရားက သူရဲ့အိမ်တံခါးပေါက်ဝမှာတင်
ရှိနေတာ အသေအချာပါပဲ။

မော်ဒန်အပူပိုင်းဒေသဗိသုကာရဲ့ဝိသေသလက္ခဏာအနေနဲ့ အိမ်ကလင်းထင်းကျယ်ဝန်းပြီး လေဝင် လေထွက်ကောင်းတဲ့ပုံစံဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ အိမ်ရှင်တွေက ထိုင်းကျောင်းတော်တွေလို ဆိတ်ငြိမ်အေးချမ်းရာနေရာ လေးကို ဖန်တီးချင်တာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ Erix Design Conceptsက နက်တာပက်ဖတနာပရုမ်ချိုင်ရဲ့ ဖန်တီးမှုဖြစ် ပြီး ပစ္စည်းတွေအနည်းပါးဆုံးနဲ့ ရှင်းလင်းနေတဲ့ ဒီအိမ်လေးကို “Villa Sati”လို့အမည်ပေးထားပြီး အဓိပ္ပာယ် အားဖြင့်တော့ “သတိနေအိမ်”၊ သိရှိနိုးကြားမှုနဲ့တစ်စုံတစ်ဦးရဲ့ပတ်ဝန်းကျင်ကို သတိပြုမိမှုဆိုတဲ့အခြေအနေ ဆိုတာကို ဖော်ပြနေတဲ့အိမ်လို့ ဆိုလိုတာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

လရောင်ဖြာကျနေပြီး ကြယ်ရောင်စုံတောက်ပနေတဲ့မိုးကောင်းကင်ထိစပ်နေတဲ့အိမ်ခေါင်မိုးက အိမ် အပြင်ဘက်မှာရှိတဲ့ ကပြင်နေရာတလျှောက်မိုးကာပေးထားပြီး ဒီကပြင်နေရာက လမ်းလျှောက်တရားမှတ် ဖို့ရာအတွက် အကောင်းဆုံးဖြစ်ကာ အဆိုတော်နဲ့သူရဲ့အမေတို့ မိသားစုအတူတကွလုပ်ဆောင်လေ့ရှိတာ ဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ သူရဲ့သုခဘုံလေးကိုမျှဝေရင်းကနေ ပေါ့ဒ်က “ဒီကိုပြောင်းလာပြီးတဲ့နောက်ပိုင်း နေ့ဘက်တွေ မှာ အချိန်တွေပိုများလာသလို ခံစားရပါတယ်။ နံနက်အစောထပြီးပြေးတယ်၊ စာဖတ်တယ်၊ သီချင်းတွေ နားထောင်ပြီး သီချင်းတွေရေးဖြစ်တယ်” လို့ ဆိုပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

သူတို့ရဲ့ကျေးလက်အပန်းဖြေစံအိမ်လေးက ရိုးရှင်းပြီးအေးချမ်းသာယာတဲ့ဘ၀လေး ဖန်တီးပေးပါ တယ်။ ဒီအိမ်မှာ အဆိုတော်နဲ့သူရဲ့အမေက သူတို့ဝါသနာပါရာဖြစ်တဲ့ အနုပညာဖန်တီးမှုအတွက် အချိန်တွေ အများကြီး ရပါတယ်။ အိမ်ရဲ့အဆောက်အအုံပုံစံက ကောင်းစွာစဉ်းစားထားတဲ့ပုံစံဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ ခေါင်မိုးရဲ့ မြင်းမိုရ်ပိတ်ဒီဇိုင်းက အိမ်အပြင်ဘက်ကပြင်နေရာနဲ့ အကောင်းဆုံးဖြည့်စွက်မှုအဖြစ် သက်သေပြနေပြီး ကျယ်ပြန့်ပွင့်လင်းတဲ့ ကြမ်းခင်းပုံစံကလည်း သဘာဝအလင်းရောင်ပိုရစေပြီး အပြင်ဘက်နေရာတွေကို အိမ် ထဲထိဆောင်ကြဉ်းလာတဲ့ ကျက်သရေရှိတဲ့ပုံစံဖြစ်ပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

အိမ်ရှေ့တံခါးကနေဝင်လာလိုက်မယ်ဆိုရင် လိပ်ပြာပုံစံခွေးခြေခုံတစ်လုံးကို မြင်တွေ့မှာဖြစ်ပြီး ဒါ က ၁၉၅၄ ခုနှစ်က ဆိုရီယာနာဂီရဲ့ ဂျပန်စက်မှုဒီဇိုင်းလက်ရာပုံစံတစ်ခုပဲဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ ကွင်းပြင်ကိုမြင် တွေ့နေရတဲ့ အိပ်ခန်းကတော့ ညာဘက်ခြမ်းမှာတည်ရှိပါတယ်။ အရှေ့တောင်လေဝင်နိုင်စေဖို့ အိမ်ရဲ့အစွန် ဆုံးဘက်နေရာ ကိုဖွင့်ထားပေးတာကိုတွေ့ရပြီး တစ်အိမ်လုံးကိုလေဝင်လေထွက်ကောင်းစေမယ့် နည်းလမ်း ကောင်းဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ ဒီနေရာကနေပြီးတော့ အနောက်ဘက်က ကြံတောနဲ့တောင်တွေအထပ်လိုက်ရှိနေတဲ့ ရှုခင်းကိုမြင်ကွင်းအပြည့်နဲ့မြင်တွေ့ခံစားနိုင်ပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

လေထဲလွင့်နေပုံမျိုး ထုထည်သေးငယ်တဲ့ပရိဘောဂက ကျယ်ပြောတဲ့နေရာတွေမှာ နယ်မြေဇုန်လေး တွေအဖြစ် အလွယ်တကူပိုင်းကန့်ပေးသလိုဖြစ်စေပြီး အခန်းထဲဝင်ထွက်သွားလာမှု ချောမွေ့လွယ်ကူစေဖို့ ဖန်တီးပေးပါတယ်။ USMက မော်ဂျူလာဘီရိုခန်းတွေကလည်း ပေါ့ဒ်ရဲ့အမေရေးဆွဲထားတဲ့ ပန်းချီကားတွေ နဲ့ ထယ်ပါဗစ်ရဲ့စိတ္တဇပန်းချီကားချိတ်ဆွဲထားရာ နံရံတလျှောက်ရဲ့ဘေးဘက်က ထင်ရှားပေါ်လွင်မှု အရှိဆုံး တည်နေရာမှာ ရှိနေပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

ဒီဇိုင်းပုံအသေးစိတ်ကို မှတ်ချက်ပြောကြားရာမှာတော့ ဗိသုကာပညာရှင် နက်တာပက်ဖတနာ ပရုမ်ချိုင်က အိမ်ရဲ့အပြင်ဘက်မှာရှိတဲ့ကပြင်တွေက သာယာလှပပြီး စိမ်းစိုနေတဲ့တောင်ရှုခင်းရဲ့ ရင်သပ် ရှုမောဖွယ်မြင်ကွင်းကျယ်တွေကို မြင်တွေ့ခံစားရစေတဲ့နေရာတွေဖြစ်ပါတယ်လို့ ဆိုပါတယ်။ နံရံတွေမှာ ကြီးမားတဲ့အဖွင့်ပုံစံတွေက လတ်ဆတ်တဲ့လေကိုဝင်ရောက်စေပြီး လေစီးဆင်းမှုကောင်းအောင်ဖန်တီးပေး ကာ အိမ်ရဲ့ဝန်းကျင်ကအပူတွေကို လျှော့ချပေးတာကြောင့် လေအေးပေးစက်ဖွင့်စရာမလိုတော့ပါဘူး။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

တစ်ချိန်တည်းမှာပဲ ခေါင်မိုးမြင်းမိုရ်ပိတ်ကနေတွဲချထားတဲ့ အမိုးကာတွေက အိမ်အပြင်ဘက်မှာ ရှိတဲ့ ကပြင်နေရာတွေကို လေဒဏ်မိုးဒဏ်ကနေ ကာကွယ်ပေးထားပါတယ်။ အိမ်အမိုးဒိုင်းတွေရဲ့ အဆုံးသတ်မှာ ပိတ်ပြီးဖုံးအုပ်ရတဲ့ သစ်သားဘုတ်ပြားတွေကိုလည်း ဗိသုကာကဖယ်ထားလိုက်ပြီး ထိုင်း စတိုင်လ်လူနေအဆောက်အအုံဗိသုကာပုံစံနဲ့ အမိုးကိုထောက်ကန်ထားတဲ့ဘောင်တွေကို ထင်ရှားအောင် ပြုလုပ်ပေးထားပါတယ်။ ခေါင်မိုးပြားတွေကိုတော့ ရှေးဟောင်းအမိုးပြားတွေပုံစံ ပြန်ပြောင်းထည့်သွင်း ပေးထားပြီး တကယ့်ဓလေ့ထုံးတမ်း လက်ရာပုံစံလိုမျိုးလှပနေစေဖို့ အထူးသုတ်ဆေးနဲ့ဖန်တီးပေးထား ပါတယ်။ မိုးယိုတာမျိုးကနေ ကာကွယ်ပေးဖို့အတွက် ကွန်ကရစ်ဘုတ်ပြားနဲ့အောက်ကနေခံပြီး တပ်ဆင် ပေးထားပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

အိမ်ရဲ့ဘောင်တွေအများစုမှာ သစ်သားဘောင်တွေဖြစ်ပြီး ခေါင်မိုးကိုထောက်ကန်ထားတဲ့ရက်မက နေ ခြေခုံဘောင်အထိတိုင် ဘောင်ကွပ်ထားတဲ့မှန်နံရံစနစ်တွေကိုပါ ထည့်သွင်းပေးထားပါတယ်။ သပ်ရပ်ပြီး ရှင်းလင်းတဲ့အိမ်ပုံစံရဲ့လျှို့ဝှက်ချက်ကတော့ တံခါးလျှောက်လမ်းတိုင်းရဲ့ ဘေးဘက်ကတိုင်တွေနဲ့ မှန်နံရံ ဘောင်တွေက တံခါးကိုပိတ်ထားတဲ့အခါမှာရော၊ ဖွင့်ထားတဲ့အခါမှာပါ အမိုးရဲ့မြင်းမိုရ်ပိတ်အဆုံးသတ်တွေ နဲ့ တပြေးတည်းတန်းလျက်ရှိနေတာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ ရလဒ်အနေနဲ့ သာယာတဲ့မြင်ကွင်းဝန်းကျင်တွေအလယ် မှာ ရှင်းလင်းတဲ့ဒီဇိုင်းလေးနဲ့ လှပတဲ့ကျေးလက်အိမ်လေးတစ်ခု ဖြစ်လာရပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

အိမ်ရဲ့အထူးဖွဲ့စည်းပုံကို Ta-khian သစ် (သိပ္ပံအမည်- Hopea odorata) နဲ့တည်ဆောက်ထားတာ ဖြစ်ပြီး အရှေ့တောင်အာရှရဲ့ဇာတိဖြစ်တဲ့အပင်ကြီးမျိုးဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ မြေပြင်ကနေ ၁.၈၀ မီတာအထိ မြှင့်ထားပေးတဲ့ ကြမ်းခင်းပြားကတော့ ဝန်ခံနိုင်တဲ့အောက်ခံဖြစ်တဲ့သံကူကွန်ကရစ်ဘောင်တွေပေါ်မှာ ရှိနေ တာဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ အပူပိုင်းရာသီဥတုဒေသတွေမှာ ဒီလိုခြေတိုင်ရှည်အိမ်ဒီဇိုင်းမျိုးတွေကို မြင်ရလေ့ရှိပြီး ဒီပုံစံက ကြမ်းခင်းအောက် လေဝင်လေထွက်ကောင်းစေတာကြောင့် အိမ်ကိုတစ်နှစ်ပတ်လုံးအေးမြနေစေ မယ့် အထူးနည်းလမ်းဖြစ်ပါတယ်။ ကြီးမားကျယ်ဝန်းတာက ထိုင်းရိုးရာအိမ်ပုံစံတွေရဲ့ပြီးပြည့်စုံတဲ့ဥပမာပုံစံ လည်းဖြစ်နေတာကြောင့် ကြည့်ကောင်းတဲ့အပြင် နေရထိုင်ရတာလည်း သက်သောင့်သက်သာရှိစေပါတယ်။

Pod Moderndog Thanachai Ujjin country hideaway Khaoyai National Park Country Villa

အဆုံးသတ်မှာတော့ အိမ်ပိုင်ရှင်က “ဒီအိမ်ရဲ့ရှင်းလင်းနည်းပါးတဲ့ပုံစံနဲ့ ပတ်ဝန်းကျင်အဖွင့်နေရာ တွေကို သဘောကျပါတယ်။ ဒါတွေက လူတွေရဲ့စိတ်ကို ထူးခြားတဲ့သက်ရောက်မှုရှိစေပါတယ်။ ကျွန်တော့် အတွက်ကတော့ ဒီအိမ်က ရှင်သန်မှုနဲ့ စိတ်အားထက်သန်မှုကိုပေးစွမ်းပါတယ်။ ကျွန်တော့်ဘဝကို ရယ်မော မှုတွေဖြည့်စွမ်းပေးပြီး စိတ်လှုပ်ရှားဖွယ်ရာစိတ်ကူးဥာဏ်သစ်တွေကို ကွန့်မြူးစေပါတယ်။ ဒီလိုပဲဖြစ်လာ တာပါ။ ကျွန်တော့်မှာ စိတ်ကူးတစ်ခုရလိုက်ပြီဆိုတာနဲ့ ဒါကတကယ့်ကိုအလားအလာရှိပြီး ကျန်တဲ့အပိုင်းက တော့လွယ်ကူသွားပါတယ်။ သီချင်းအပုဒ်ရေများစွာရဲ့ တေးစာသားတွေကို အေးချမ်းတဲ့ဒီအိမ်လေးမှာ ရေး သားခဲ့တာပါ။ ကျယ်ပြောလှတဲ့ ကျေးလက်ဒေသက ဒီအိမ်လေးက အနုပညာရှင်တစ်ဦးဖြစ်တဲ့ ကျွန်တော့် အတွက် ကြီးမားတဲ့ဆုလာဘ်ပါပဲ” လို့ ပြောသွားခဲ့ပါတယ်။

Story: Samutcha Viraporn
Photographs: Soopakorn Srisakul

Baan Hing Hoi: A Modern Duplex Design Exudes the Charm of Bygone Days

Baan Hing Hoi: A Modern Duplex Design Exudes the Charm of Bygone Days

/ Bangkok, Thailand /

/ Story: Sarayut Sreetip-ard / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Soopakorn Srisakul, Wasin Pummarin / Styling: Suanpuk Stylist /

A modern duplex house by EAST Architects makes use of natural light, sun and airflow to provide indoor thermal comfort that’s the hallmark of the ultimate Tropical design.

One wing holds a semi-outdoor living space roofed over with flat terracotta tiles in a timeless shade of gray. It’s built almost entirely of wood with a balcony and a “tai thun”, or the underfloor space high enough for many different uses. 

The other wing boasts the style, experience and flexible realities characteristic of postmodernism. To get enough natural light, the building is enclosed by exterior glass wall systems. Upstairs, a straight passageway connecting individual spaces leads to a cantilevered room that extends 6 meters supported by a rigid V-shaped steel frame – an unusual approach to lightweight modern house design.

Modern HouseModern House

The upper covering of the ultramodern wing is a steel-reinforced concrete slab. The high pitched gable roof that rises above it is topped with corrugated aluminum panels to allow light to pass through. This keeps the home well-lit by day and glowing with light and color by night, which explains why it’s named “Baan Hing Hoi”, literally translated as “Fireflies House”.

A piece of architecture representing the nexus between Eastern and Western ideas, the Fireflies House is a design that merges Modern and Traditional values into one Tropical-style home. The house plan doesn’t sit parallel to the road in front of it. Neither does it align with property boundary lines. Rather, it’s designed to respond to wind direction and the sun’s path across the sky for the perfect indoor thermal comfort.

That pretty much summarizes the design concept embraced by two assistant professors, Pirast Pacharaswate and Sayanee Virochrut, of EAST Architects. The design duo prides themselves on being the “architects of Tropical rainforests”.

EAST Architect Modern Thai HouseEAST Architect Modern Thai HouseEAST Architect Modern Thai House

Together they turned a family’s wish into reality. The homeowner, Thanawat Yongsanguanchai, wanted a modern, warm and welcoming place where his family could spend more time together outdoors.

He was looking for a bright and breezy design, one that’s comfortable without air conditioning. And the architect duo was on hand to deliver exactly that by making natural ingredients pretty much an integral part of the plan.

The result was a well-thought-out modern house that included a part intended be perceived as if it were a tunnel leading to another world beautifully ensconced in the rear of the property.

Modern House

“In essence, it’s a design takes into account basic human needs for relaxation and the culture in which people live. Simply put, the relationship between culture and climate is one of the inevitabilities of life. It’s for this reason that the house is built with knowledge of the climate in mind,” said architect Pirast Pacharaswate.

“We think up contradictory thoughts when designing the duplex house plan. The kids belong to a new generation, but their living wing boasts certain features and comforts that are symbolic of Thai-style houses in former times. In juxtaposition, it’s strikingly different from the design of the parents wing, which is evidence of a new language of architecture.

“The parents wing sits under a high pitched gable roof that glows with light and color, which conveys a great deal about the postmodern school of thought. The real upper covering that functions as the roof in a practical sense is a steel-reinforced concrete slab that lies underneath it. In other words, the gable is there to make a statement about postmodern philosophy.”

Pirast explained: “It’s our intention to present a feature characteristic of traditional gable roof houses, something considered old-fashioned. And to create a welcome contrast, we roof it over with modern building materials instead.

“The result is a modern house topped with a gable that shimmers in the sunlight. It’s covered with corrugated aluminum panels that’s lightweight and very noticeable, creating an entirely new perception.”

EAST Architect Modern Thai House

“We found out that the homeowner preferred white to other colors, so we responded with a choice of cool-toned whites for the parents wing. For contrast and comparison, the children’s wing gives a powerful impression of being Thai. It’s roofed over with flat terracotta tiles in a nice shade gray.

“Wood is the main building material here. For strength and durability, the truss or framework supporting the roof is made of metal, but the skill and craftsmanship are Thai style. The two wings are linked by a roofed platform along the outside of the house.”

\

The children’s wing is semi-outdoor by design, thanks to the veranda and spacious traditional-style underfloor spaces. It differs greatly from the parents wing that’s enclosed by exterior glass wall systems, a great way to bring the beauty of the outdoors inside. Go straight down the corridor, and you come to individual rooms and functional areas with modern conveniences.

Modern House

The ground floor holds a pantry and dining area with a sitting room nearby. It’s dominated by a long dining table that’s custom-made. The upper floor contains Mom and Dad’s bedroom that projects horizontally into space.

Glass walls pour natural light into the room that’s embraced by nature. There’s a multi-purpose room with wood décor ideas. An array of alternating plain and hand-carved wood cabinets ooze the charm and poise of Thai-style residential architecture.

Upstairs, the bedroom projects 6 meters into space supported by a rigid V-shaped steel frame for a lightweight look. Floor-to-ceiling glass wall systems afford views of the landscape.

Modern House

Proceed to the children’s wing, and you discover not all ceilings are horizontal. Their bedrooms boast beautiful ceilings that slope in agreement with the gable roof. The vertical siding under the gable is open to bring natural brightness inside, while accent wall ideas behind the headboard fill the room in style.

There’s something quintessentially Thai in the bedroom where the platform bed frame is wider than the mattress, an easy hack to create space for wedge pillows and the triangle pillow that’s unique to Thai culture.

EAST Architect Modern Thai House

The architect said: “To make a positive first impression, it’s good to be a noticeable new phenomenon. Like so, the garden pathway is strategically built in such a way that people recognize the unique roof design as they approach the house from various distances and directions, each resulting in a different point of view.

“Psychologically, humans and architecture interact with each other all the time. Circulation, or human movement in and around a piece of architecture, constitutes an interaction. It’s an experience that creates an awareness and evokes admiration of architectural beauty,” Pirast wrapped it up nicely.

All told, the gable roof duplex evokes respect and warm approval through outstanding design and the power of storytelling that combines traditional values, longing for nature, and great aesthetic pleasure into one coherent whole.

Modern House


Owner: Thanawat Yongsanguanchai

Architect: EAST Architects (www.eastarchitects.com)


You may also like…

White House: A Bright, Seemingly Hovering House by Saola Architects

Quiet Interaction of Landscape Design and Architecture

A Box-shaped House in A Mid-City Garden by Vin Varavarn Architects 

A Box-shaped House in A Mid-City Garden by Vin Varavarn Architects 

/ Bangkok, Thailand /

/ Story: Samutcha Viraporn / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Soopakorn Srisakul /

To have more space for his three children, M.L. Varudh Varavarn (Vin) of Vin Varavarn Architects built this modern house amid a garden on a quarter-acre property in the heart of Bangkok’s Chidlom District.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects

 

“Children need a place with trees to run and play,” was Vin’s first thought in keeping all the original trees for the garden. Each room looks out on this great play area.

“When we built the place we’d just come back from living abroad in a town house. There wasn’t really enough space for the kids there, so we made this home more about the kids than ourselves,” he told LivingASEAN.

 

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
The house, the balcony, and the garden are simple components of a tropical house. Although porous from wood borer beetles, these folding doors are perfectly functional. The decorative garden stones were dug up from the property.

 

One primary building material was 20-year-old teakwood from Vin’s mother’s plantation in Kamphaeng Phet, much of which had been eaten hollow by wood boring beetles and couldn’t be sold to a lumber yard.

“We figured wood like this might give an interesting look. Talking with The Jam Factory contractor Subhashok gave us some ideas.

“We wanted something that didn’t look too slick, but had unique character and was durable. Wood, concrete, and steel were our main building materials.”

With porous teak, it’s best to cut the wood into narrow boards, sort out the more porous ones, then use the different types in different parts of the house.

Wood with no holes is used for flooring. Even though you can see into the sapwood on some, porous wood panels can be used for latticework, folding doors/windows, and ceilings, which are not usually touched by people, and they can be patched where called for.

 

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
The wall separating the stairwell from the living room displays a rough concrete surface.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
By the stair to the 2nd floor, natural light shines into the front hall indoor courtyard. The living room is behind the wall on the right.

 

This steel-frame box-shaped house uses cement walls as artifice: for instance, the wall of rough concrete next to the parking area creates a vertical play of light and shadow on garden stone surfaces.

Meantime, the living room’s big brick walls are surfaced with concrete poured in different concentrations, creating gray stripes in gentle contrast to the rough harshness of the concrete itself.

The house plan visually connects interior and outdoor spaces in a number of places: coming in the door, we first encounter an interior court with a tree, then walk around into the living area, dining space, and large open-plan pantry flanked on both sides by gardens, seeming to switch character back and forth between being indoors and outdoors.

By the tree court is a latticed staircase of wood and steel leading to the 2nd floor, where we find a living area, children’s activity room, and all the bedrooms.

 

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
The living room with a big sofa for family socializing. To save building expense the steel frame is light as possible, which also gives the house a light, open look.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
Folding doors filter light and give security and privacy. Adding to the green, plants grow along the wall by the neighboring house.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
Close by the open living area is a dining table where Vin does a little work most mornings. Furthest in is a long, narrow pantry-style kitchen also used for informal eating.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
On the 2nd floor is a children’s activity room, the surrounding glass adding openness and drawing natural light from both the interior court and the side facing the house next door.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects
On the 2nd floor is a children’s activity room, the surrounding glass adding openness and drawing natural light from both the interior court and the side facing the house next door.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects

“The kids have been happy here, and feel more like staying at home, so we’ve achieved a nice level of success,” added M.L. Varudh. Before the evening came we got to see all 3 of Vin’s children as they got back from school to run, play, climb, and have fun, laughing and smiling, sometimes in the children’s activity room.

Box-shaped House Vin Varavarn Architects


Architect: M.L. Varudh Varavarn of Vin Varavarn Architects


You may also like…

MODERN TROPICAL HOME IN INDONESIA

Baan Lek Villa: A House-Cum-Homestay in Chanthaburi

Baan Lek Villa: A House-Cum-Homestay in Chanthaburi

/ Chanthaburi, Thailand /

/ Story: Wuthikorn Sut / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Soopakorn Srisakul /

This is a stilt house design where the contemporary style merges with rural vernacular in Chanthaburi. It’s built on the concept of home with a dual nature – a villa-cum-homestay. The design pays particular attention to the simple life and harmony with the surroundings, plus good positioning in relation to light and wind patterns makes it more comfortable to live.

Baan Lek Villa is the work of “KaewRinrada Nirote, homeowner and architect at GLA DESIGN STUDIO, in collaboration with designer Pitch Nimchinda. It’s intended to accommodate her family, house guests and friends of her mother (“LekKuna Nirote).

Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO

Rinrada came to Bangkok to further her studies and has worked there since graduation. Little by little it dawned on her that building a new house in her native Chanthaburi would be a good idea.

It would give her a place to stay and a small office away from the city. She wanted a design that looked simple yet attractive, kept within the budget, and blended into the community.

Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO

The result is a home that merges with the surrounding countryside. Simple house design offers two distinctly different zones – private and public areas.

The living space is raised up on piles, while the ample multi-use area underneath it is meant for dining and receiving guests.

Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO

Sharing her slice of paradise, Rinrada says that nowadays more people are yearning for a simple way of living. Advances in technology have made it possible for us live anywhere and still be able to work. What we need is a case for carrying clothes and a few personal belongings, plus a portable computer.

Even better if you have a place of your choice that helps you relax in nature. Intended to make our breaks truly refreshing in the countryside, this house was complete only recently. So far it has received many guests and friends of her mother and brother.

“We didn’t intend to make it a family business. I was into hotel designing to begin with. Now that I have a house of my own, Mom has invited her friends over. They loved it and spread the good word. So we thought the time was ripe to provide the accommodation of guests. It’s important that they get to experience the relaxing side of Chantaburi town,” she said.

Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIOBaan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO

What makes this house unique is the architectural detail that’s right for the climate of Thailand.

The design takes into account seasonal variations, such as sunlight and wind patterns, to create a comfortable environment. Rinrada got the inspiration for the multi-use ground floor from “Have you eaten yet?” a traditional expression of goodwill that Thais say as a sign of welcome.

This explains why a dining table set and kitchen counter are there. The area doubles as waiting room for people who drop by for a visit just like old times.

Walk up the stairs and you come to a more private area of the house, which consists of a large balcony and main living quarters.

Overall, the building is made of concrete that works well with beautiful wood accents. To make the building appear lightweight, the entire floor of the overhanging balcony is made of steel framework.

Taken as a whole, it’s a perfect mix of concrete, steel and clever design that lets the beauty of natural wood stand out.

Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO

For an aesthetic appeal, the ground floor is covered to some extent by eggshell pebble pavers that seamlessly connect with the surrounding landscape. The garden sits in the shade for much of the day thanks to the house being positioned on the western side of land.

The fact that it’s located in the further reach also leaves plenty of extra room available for future projects. For the time being, Rinrada intends to turn the front yard into an ample garden filled with large trees, shrubs and natural light.

Baan Lek Villa GLA DESIGN STUDIO

Most importantly, Rinrada says it’s the understanding of the context that sets the main idea about good house design. Appropriate orientation involves more than just the sun’s path or seasonal wind patterns. Every little detail must be taken into account.

This modest home is designed to blend with the environment and other key attributes that have made Chanthaburi town famous. It merges with rural vernacular and sprawling fruit orchards. It’s built of material that’s available locally, reclaimed lumber included.

All told, it’s one that stands in perfect harmony with the community.


Owner: Rinrada Nirote

Architect: GLA Design Studio


You may also like

Wood House Amid the Rice Fields
Wood House Amid the Rice Fields


Relaxing Country Lifestyle
Relaxing Country Lifestyle

White House: A Bright, Seemingly Hovering House by Saola Architects

White House: A Bright, Seemingly Hovering House by Saola Architects

/ Vientiane, Laos /

/ Story: Nawapat Dusdul / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Akira Sato, François Hervy /

This light and airy house with lots of white looks like an optical illusion. Nestled in the heart of Vientiane, it appears to be floating above a lush green oasis with crystal-clear pool water. The beautiful dwelling called “White House” is the work of Saola Architects, a homegrown design studio in Laos.

Saola Architects

The pastel white house with 160 sq. m. usable internal space sits encompassed by its natural surroundings. As Saola Architects intended, it has the general shape of the letter V. The ground floor is mostly enclosed by glass walls that afford the seamless integration of indoor and outdoor living spaces.

 

The architects said they got the design inspiration from a vernacular architectural style in Laos. The house plan, which reflects local traditions, has been adapted to make it suitable for modern living. This includes making the interior living rooms bright and airy, and connect to outdoor spaces with no apparent gaps or spaces in between.

Saola Architects

The swimming pool is placed in a straight line along one side of the V-shaped design that in a way is dictated by the appearance of the land.

As time passes, sunlight reflected from the pool puts on a spectacular shadow and light show on nearby walls. Because the ground floor enclosure is made mostly out of glass, only the upper part of the house is visible from afar and seemingly hovering above the landscape.

Saola Architects Saola Architects

The inground pool provides passive cooling that drives natural air circulation, thereby improving the indoor thermal comfort. As pool water evaporates, air currents carry moisture or water vapor into and out of the room.

As a result of that, the interior is kept cool without the need for air conditioning. The heat gain control makes the house comfortable to live despite a hot and humid climate.

Saola Architects Saola Architects

Aesthetically, the house is a mix of bare concrete on the inside and lots of white paint on the outside. For an improvement of the indoor climate, wood is the main décor material for its ability to provide a soothing ambience, especially in private areas on the second floor.

By and large, the seemingly floating house is poetry in motion when kissed by the sun. It’s spacious, airy and bright thanks to open floor design, plus windows that allow plenty of natural light and good ventilation all year round.

Saola Architects


Architect: Saola Architects
Furniture and Décor: Birds Follow Spring


From An Old Home to A Stunning House on Stilts

From An Old Home to A Stunning House on Stilts

/ Chachoengsao, Thailand /

/ Story: Samutcha Viraporn / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Soopakorn Srisakul /

This lovingly restored home on the canal is a hybrid of wood and concrete. Made of recycled materials from an old building on the property, it evokes memories of the house on stilts symbolic of the Thai way of life. Reclaimed timber paired with the concrete framework and smart design elements creates a harmonious blend of traditional and modern. 

 

House on Stilts
The old house before a complete teardown to make room for a new home.

A New House with Old-World Charm

Suthep Iam-on is the owner of an old house on the canal in Bang Pakong area. It has fallen into disrepair. At first, he had planned to just leave it at that and move on to build a new house closer to the road instead. He sought advice from architect Kasin Sornsri of Volume Matrix Studio about building a naked concrete home.

But after inspecting the proposed site, Kasin thought it wise to do a complete teardown of the old home to make room for a new one using materials recycled from the old house.

The interior makes use of large, open spaces. Food is prepared in the farthest area enclosed by brick walls. The door to the master bedroom is opposite a dining table set that the homeowner bought from BaanLaeSuan Fair. In the foreground, a sitting room with sofa and coffee counter affords beautiful views.
The interior makes use of large, open spaces. Food is prepared in the farthest area enclosed by brick walls. The door to the master bedroom is opposite a dining table set that the homeowner bought from BaanLaeSuan Fair. In the foreground, a sitting room with a sofa and coffee counter affords beautiful views.

The coffee counter with a view. The stair leading to the second floor is to the right side of the room, protected from sunlight by a solid wall.

Polished concrete surfaces adorn the front entrance. The doorway casing is made of reclaimed timber, while brickwork stands out as the main feature of the hybrid wood and concrete home.

House on Stilts
Homeowner Suthep Iam-on walks toward the rear of the house. The corridor looks spacious as it is in the interior living space.

Explaining his concept, Kasin said:

“Essentially, it’s about building a new home that’s very much part of the spirit of the times. It’s a design that connects with the way of life of ordinary people.

“At the same time, it doesn’t have to be the kind of Thai-style house that we have grown accustomed to for years. Not many people appreciate that. Nor is it anything like a group of buildings of the Ayutthaya Period.”

Built by locals over 40 years ago, the old stilt house was in poor condition. Many home features did not meet living standards now, plus a few add-ons were put in place, including concrete walls that enclosed the ground floor, which affected structural integrity.

Nonetheless, the way of life here has remained unchanged and carefully integrated into the new design. In the process, every little detail was decoded into intelligent language.

The result was an entirely new home built on a concrete structure. It has all the key attributes of the traditional Thai home, such as an open space on the ground floor, a platform along the outside for fresh air, and a corridor connecting the rooms. They are wrapped in old timber recycled from the old house.

The sitting parlor showcases numerous trophies won as prizes for victory in bird contests. Not far away, a full grown tamarind tree keeps the living room in shade.
The sitting parlor showcases numerous trophies won as prizes for victory in bird contests. Not far away, a full-grown tamarind tree keeps the living room in shade.

On the southwest side, the hallway that contains a staircase receives a fair amount of sunlight. It’s protected from too much sun by a tamarind tree and wood pillars recycled from the old house. Shadows thrown on the wall are on show again naturally.
On the southwest side, the hallway that contains a staircase receives a fair amount of sunlight. It’s protected from too much sun by a tamarind tree and wood pillars recycled from the old house. Shadows thrown on the wall are on show again, naturally.

House on Stilts
The wing that contains a bedroom is covered in reclaimed timber. It’s raised on piles to protect from humidity and doubles as an engine that drives natural air circulation. Variegated colors of old wood bespeak the vernacular choice of material.

Ground Floor Living Room, Simple Materials, and Lighting Ideas

The first eye-catching feature is the concrete framework with polished surfaces paired with stunning wood accents.

Reclaimed timber from the old house finds new purposes as flooring materials, interlaced structures resembling lattices, and pillars supporting lightweight parts of the building. Walk into the interior, and you come before an open floor plan that’s the hallmark of modern home design. Further back lies a courtyard with a corridor connecting the rooms.

There are bedrooms on one side and an open space on the other, which looks out over a garden and nearby Bang Samak Canal. As the homeowner puts it, the area arouses a sentimental longing for the past, especially memories of his father’s time.

 

One thing the architect is able to do is to concentrate on significant features of the Thai house and incorporate them into the language of the new house design.

They include the use of transom windows, skylights, pillars, and lattices, which he carefully places at intervals. In so doing, large pillars recycled from the old house are erected along the western front to help protect the area exposed to the sun.

By late afternoon, the soft glowing light from the sky alternating with dark areas creates a relaxing atmosphere like the Thai house in the olden days. By nightfall, lanterns light up at intervals as a means of visual expression and make the home cozy and welcoming.

The house built on stilts offers plenty of headroom on the ground floor to let fresh air enter and circulate from the southwest. Not far away, a full-grown tamarind tree keeps the area in the shade for much of the day.

House on Stilts
From the canal looking in, the courtyard floor is covered in pebble stone pavers amid the vernacular garden that’s easy on the eyes. The homeowner’s son lives in the two-level wing on the right.

House on Stilts
The ground floor with plenty of headroom is characteristic of the Thai-style house on stilts. The area under the canopy of trees is kept cool by gentle breezes.

Old wood piles not fitting for building purpose find new life as garden sculpture ideas by the waterfront.
Old wood piles not fitting for building purposes find new life as garden sculpture ideas by the waterfront.

A garden path connects the house to a landing stage on the canal.
A garden path connects the house to a landing stage on the canal.

House on Stilts
Under the canopy of tall trees, the ground floor is open to receive cool breezes blowing in from the southwest.

A warm and welcoming atmosphere embraced by nature.
A warm and welcoming atmosphere embraced by nature.

The character and atmosphere of the place viewed from the waterfront garden.
The character and atmosphere of the place viewed from the waterfront garden.

The Allure of a Handcrafted Home

The house has many aviaries for keeping birds in. They are there by design. At different places, new decor items stand embraced by old artifacts as a means of visual expression that merges countryside vernacular with modern living.

Together, they represent a source of pride and pleasure within the local community.

More than anything else, it’s a handmade home in its own right. The architect’s message is evident.

That is to say, a home doesn’t have to be of impeccable character. Bricks don’t have to be identical to make beautiful walls. “Likewise, if we look at life carefully, we’ll find that everyone is interesting in his own special way. All ways of life are just as beautiful,” said the architect.

The cube-shaped wing houses a sitting parlor that showcases trophies from victory in bird contests.
The cube-shaped wing houses a sitting parlor that showcases trophies from victory in bird contests.

House on Stilts
Despite its contemporary cube design, the house is built of simple materials with features that are the hallmark of the traditional house on stilts.

House on Stilts
The hybrid wood and concrete home boasts a spacious ground floor that’s fully functional and perfectly suitable for modern living.

An archway forms a passage from the landing stage on the canal. This picture was taken during a dry season.
An archway forms a passage from the landing stage on the canal. This picture was taken during a dry season.

Seen from a distance, the house stands surrounded by mature trees that provide shade and make it comfortable to live.
Seen from a distance, the house stands surrounded by mature trees that provide shade and make it comfortable to live.

The power of storytelling. A veranda in front of the house showcases a collection of tools ad utesils used by the people of Bang Pakong area.
The power of storytelling. A veranda in front of the house showcases a collection of tools ad utensils used by the people of the Bang Pakong area.

 


Owner: Suthep Iam-on

Architect: Volume Matrix Studio


You May Also Like

Baan Lek Villa: A House-Cum-Homestay in Chanthaburi
Baan Lek Villa: A House-Cum-Homestay in Chanthaburi

X