House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti

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House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti

Information

  • Project Name: House That Opens Up to the Sun
  • Practice: Stempel & Tesař architekti
  • Products: OKNA , FireTube , Kartell , Ligne Roset , ABB
  • Completion year: 2022
  • Gross Built up Area: 127 m²
  • Project Location: Malé Kyšice
  • Country: Czech Republic
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Ján Stempel, Jan Jakub Tesař
  • Collaborators: Chief project engineer: Aleš Herold, Wooden construction statics: Timber design
  • Photo Credits: Filip Šlapal
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Excerpt: House That Opens Up to the Sun, designed by Stempel & Tesar architekti, opens up to the sun’s rays like a fan, soaking up its energy and seeking to use it economically. Thanks to its shape, the interior welcomes the first as well as the last rays of sunlight. Naturally, homeowners appreciate warmth in the winter, when warmth gathered from the sun reduces heating costs.

Project Description

[Text as submitted by architect] In the southern part of Malé Kyšice town on the edge of the Křivoklát woods, there is a residential district originally home to weekend cottages. One such cottage on a flat plot of land was replaced by a passive home. The floor plan closely resembles a quarter-circle with walls  made of exposed concrete blocks. The rounded wall and the ceilings are made of wood. The building opens up to the southwest into a fully-grown garden. The fully glazed facade consists of windows set in anthracite frames, which are shaded by blinds inside the triple-glazed windows. The ceiling beams extend to cover the balcony on the upper floor and the terrace on the ground floor. The architects made extensive use of the contrast between the concrete and wooden building elements in the interior as well. The ground floor is home to a living room, kitchen, and dining room, and an open staircase leads to the four bedrooms upstairs. The bathrooms, service rooms, and storage spaces are located along the concrete walls.

House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
© Filip Šlapal
House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
© Filip Šlapal

Light and warmth

The building opens up to the sun’s rays like a fan, soaking up its energy and seeking to use it economically. Thanks to its shape, the interior welcomes the first as well as the last rays of sunlight. But the house also knows how to keep from overheating, thanks to an overhanging roof and horizontal shading that protects the windows from the midday sun in the summer and acts as a balcony on the upper floor. In addition to the building’s pragmatic shape and passive shading, comfort on summer days is also aided by blinds built into the triple-glazed windows. Thanks to quality workmanship and the use of modern technologies, their effectiveness is comparable to outdoor blinds.

House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
Site Plan © Stempel & Tesar architekti
House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
© Filip Šlapal

Naturally, homeowners appreciate warmth in the winter, when warmth gathered from the sun reduces heating costs. The building’s self-sufficiency is further aided by a stove with a heat exchanger at the heart of the building. A stairway winding its way around the stove leads up to the bedrooms located above the living room.

Earth

The house is built primarily from a renewable material – wood. The building’s construction respects its shape and reveals the constructional principles literally to the last detail, including steel joints and tie rods that add a finishing touch to the interior and exterior. The built-in furniture has been placed between the beams in such a manner that the rooms resemble ship cabins.

House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
© Filip Šlapal

Other important elements of a sustainable approach are durability and lifespan. For this reason, the building’s windward sides are protected by walls made of concrete blocks. An insulated sandwich wall aids in the natural accumulation of warmth while also promoting the building’s stability. All technical rooms and bathrooms are concentrated along these solid, stable walls to create something like a zone of balance between the building’s southern and northern sides.

Water and air

The way the building uses water are visible at the first glaze. A small pond optimizes the use of rainwater, meaning there is sufficient water for watering the garden even during dry periods, thanks also to its own root zone treatment plant.

House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
© Filip Šlapal
House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
Plan © Stempel & Tesar architekti

The retention of surface water in the garden pleasantly influences the microclimate in the immediate vicinity of the building. The property releases no wastewater into the local sewers – all water is used at least twice. The house takes a similar approach to air by using recuperation to warm fresh air from outside during the winter months.

The owners moved into the building even before it was completely finished. Over time, they have made not only the house but also the garden their home. Buried under the garden is a prefabricated cellar made of recycled plastic. Gardening implements and bicycles are stored in shipping containers. The house lives its own, undemanding life and is gradually blending in with the garden.

House That Opens Up to the Sun | Stempel & Tesar architekti
© Filip Šlapal

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