A Narrow, Multigenerational Home Lets Nature Permeate

A Narrow, Multigenerational Home Lets Nature Permeate

A Narrow, Multigenerational Home Lets Nature Permeate

/ Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam /

/ Story: Kangsadan K. / English version: Bob Pitakwong /

/ Photographs: Apinine Thassanopas /

A home in an elongated rectangle performs a dual role as a multigenerational residence and an architectural office in the middle of a densely populated area in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Needless to say, there were site constraints that limited the design of the building. Some of the challenges were just inevitable, but an architect homeowner has found a way to deal with them, turning the hot and stuffy home into a clean, well-lighted place. The secrets to success lie in reconnecting with nature by integrating green spaces in the plan. Notwithstanding the narrow space, the home is lovingly restored and fully loaded with all functionalities.

Multigenerational Home
A view from the street shows how a narrow lot limits and influences design, making it necessary to build vertically.

As the architect explained it, living in a crowded urban environment doesn’t always mean sacrificing good life or cutting off from the great outdoors. On the contrary, it’s design flexibility and serious attention to detail that’s the key to combining both opaque and see-through structures to form a whole, ultimately creating in a living space that breathes easily.

A charcoal sketch illustrates spatial planning and functionality on the first floor. / Courtesy of k59 atelier
Charcoal drawings show spatial planning on the second and third floors. / Courtesy of k59 atelier
Charcoal sketches show the positioning of rooms and functionalities on the fourth floor [top], and the rooftop deck [bottom]. / Courtesy of k59 atelier
A drawing of the side elevation view in cross section. / Courtesy of k59 atelier
Multigenerational Home
The architect and family enjoy the cozy ambiance of a living room that reflects a multigenerational home.

In other words, it’s a home that’s not so much a solid mass of stonework, and not so much a sealed-off glass enclosure that can never be open. They are inherent parts of the building that reach out to reconnect with nature, people, culture and society at large.

Multigenerational Home

Multigenerational Home
A full-size kitchen lies at the rear of the house with a back door that can open directly onto the road behind it.

Speaking of design, all four levels of the building feature open floor plans that allow natural light and provide fresh air to the interiors. The first floor holds a spacious living room up front and a kitchen at the rear that’s proper in the circumstances of a big family.

Multigenerational Home
A footbridge gives access to a bedroom at the rear of the house.
Multigenerational Home
The mezzanine holds an altar showing honor and reverence for family ancestry according to Vietnamese culture. It’s covered with a gable roof consistent with vernacular architecture in the region.

Together, they form the heart of a multigenerational home, with plenty of space for an elderly mother, an aunt, a brother, and the architect’s own family with a little child. The second floor bears some resemblance to a mezzanine with an altar for the veneration of family ancestry characteristic of Vietnamese culture. The third floor is the architect’s private office space, while the fourth holds the principal bedroom with a green garden oasis for complete relaxation.

The third floor has a footbridge providing access to a bedroom at the far end elevated by potted indoor plants.
The third floor holding an architectural workspace feels spacious and airy, thanks to an open floor plan.
The architect’s office space benefits from natural light and fresh air, passive cooling strategies that saves big on AC costs.

There’s one feature that’s exceptionally good. The elongated rectangle is divided into two more or less distinct sections. The front and rear parts of the house lie separated by a center corridor onto which rooms open.

The top floor holds a private residential space accessed via a footbridge that connects the sitting room up front with the bedroom at the rear.

By design, functional spaces are located up front, with private residential areas tucked away in quiet places at the rear. The bedrooms for family members are scattered on almost every floor. For optimal traffic flow, all the rooms are linked to one another via the corridor and stairway at the center.

Multigenerational Home
The house façade with lush plants thriving in a garden trough brings positive vibes to the home.
The facade supports a vertical garden from the third floor to the top. Plant irrigation is well planned to prevent water splashing back into the home.

Apart from the bright and airy center hall, the building façade features pleasing simplicity of appearance. At ground level, a bi-fold fence system is crafted of perforated metal panels for good ventilation.

Multigenerational Home

Multigenerational Home
The sitting area has a small pantry for making breakfast and light meals without having to make a trip downstairs.

Above it, the balcony façade is enclosed by custom iron frames in various sizes and configurations, adorned with lush climbing vines. They thrive in company with small threes growing luxuriantly nearby. In essence, it’s about bringing green into the home, turning it into a healthy and happy place to live for a multigenerational family.


Architect: k59 atelier


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