The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc

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The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc

Information

  • Project Name: The Veil House
  • Practice: Paperfarm Inc
  • Products: CHA (Cheng Hsin Aluminum) , Rainbow Paint , Champion , Toto , Estiluz , Fisher & Paykel , Viettiles
  • Completion year: 2023
  • Gross Built up Area: 315 m2
  • Project Location: Kaohsiung City
  • Country: Taiwan
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Daniel Yao, Jarrett Boor
  • Design Team: Daniel Yao, Jarrett Boor, Bing-Yu Yu
  • Clients: Yang Family
  • Structural Consultants: Antop Structural Engineering
  • Contractors: Yuan-Shen Construction, Yih Tsae Interiors
  • Project Manager: Bing-Yu Yu
  • Interior + Furniture: Paperfarm Inc
  • Photo Credits: Paperfarm Inc
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Excerpt: The Veil House by Paperfarm Inc reinterprets the 1899 Taiwan-Renga brick kiln’s prosperity by weaving a modern, tapestry-like façade using floating clay bricks. The residence redefines urban living by introducing a peaceful retreat with a perforated brick façade, allowing filtered light into living spaces and bedrooms. The design reimagines the home as a breathable, permeable skin with perforation density tailored to functional needs behind enclosures.

Project Description

The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc

[Text as submitted by architect] Situated near the historic “Taiwan-Renga” brick kiln from 1899 that prospered this working-class district in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, the Veil House revisits this history by weaving a modern, tapestry-like façade utilizing floating clay bricks.

In a district with very narrow streets, close proximity to neighbors, and a hyperactive social fabric, privacy is often compromised. To maintain boundaries, windows are often shaded throughout the day; outdoor spaces, such as balconies and terraces, are left largely unused.

The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc
The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
Floor Plans © Paperfarm Inc
The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc

The Veil House challenges this public/private dynamic of compact urban living creating a peaceful retreat that redefines the nature of this neighborhood’s typical house: a perforated brick façade liberates the need for window treatments and still allows filtered light into all the living spaces and bedrooms. The impetus for security and privacy reimagines the home as a body with a breathable, permeable skin. Like skin’s pores, perforation density is devised according to the functional needs behind the enclosures.

The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
Elevations and Section © Paperfarm Inc
The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc

With cored bricks secured by rebars, shelf angles, and steel channels, the brick veil is designed to withstand the local challenges of earthquakes and typhoons.  There are also three emergency exits, engineered with saw-tooth pivots, seamlessly inserted onto the façade.

The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc

On the street level, automobile storage is provided without visually distracting the pedestrian entry.  The powder-coated stainless-steel door is 12 ft by 7 ft (366 cm by 214 cm) in size and is two inches thick.  The door and its mechanical track are hung from above, installed behind five courses of veneer bricks with a guide rail below.

The entry, through an interior garden, helps quiet the transition from the bustling city streets and provides a deep threshold into the heart of the home, thus acting as a type of perforation. The residents circle around an open atrium clad with 2 by 6 vertical aluminum louvers, to enter the main living area on the second floor.

The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc
The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc

This materiality pays homage to another Taiwanese vernacular of protected fenestrations while enhancing the verticality of the home. Programmatically, this atrium is the engine of the house: it is an urban garden on the ground floor; on the bedroom’s balconies it is a light-well introducing natural illuminance into the rooms; it is an air shaft for cross-ventilation with the brick veil at the front facade; and it is a connector that ties circulation and program together across multiple floors.  

Behind the veil, this shifting perspective and the vertical stratification of programs accentuate public versus private relationships. This forms the central discourse on the introverted approach of the home.

The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc
The Veil House | Paperfarm Inc
© Paperfarm Inc

Throughout the home’s interior, custom-designed terrazzo flooring defines spaces within the largely, open-plan living floors, while full-length, custom white-oak millwork conceals not only the kitchen but the entertainment and storage spaces as well.  

The reductive use of materials enhances the focus on the brick veil and the respite gained in the quiet, minimal interior.  The desire to build a cozy, airy lifestyle behind an urban façade that successfully withdraws from the frenetic street life is the defining characteristic of the Veil House.

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