Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect

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Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect

Information

  • Project Name: Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf
  • Practice: Jan Proksa – Architect
  • Products: Zumtobel , Sora , Gira , Keim , Wienerberger , AutoDesk , Rhinoceros , Röfix
  • Completion year: 2020
  • Gross Built up Area: 313 sqm
  • Project Location: Perchtoldsdorf
  • Country: Austria
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Jan Proksa
  • Design Team: Jan Proksa, Ursula Knappl, Marija Markovic
  • Structural Consultants: Neli Raschkova-Anastassova
  • Landscape Consultants: Korbinian Lechner
  • Interior + Furniture: Jan Proksa
  • Photo Credits: Boysplaynice
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Excerpt: Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf, designed by Jan Proksa – Architect, maximizes the volume of a narrow plot of land to create a modern living space for a two-generation family. The outlines and the façade of the house are reminiscent of the unique and traditional craftwork of Viennese houses. From the intimate entrance to the large open plan living space, this interaction between the perpendicular and the oblique defines a certain perception that pervades the experience of the structure.

Project Description

[Text as submitted by architect] Imagining a villa, one pictures a sprawling complex of buildings and land, echoing dynastic opulence. For this villa commission in a quiet village outside of Vienna, Austria, I was challenged with maximizing the volume of a difficult and narrow plot of land in order to create a modern living space for a two-generation family.

Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
© Jan Proksa – Architect
Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
© Jan Proksa – Architect
Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
© Jan Proksa – Architect

The first impression of the construction is of a container as a living space. However, the eye is soon drawn to the discrepancies between the use of ninety-degree angles and a slightly deviating complementary angle. The friction between the two angles, used both in the wall structure and the floor plan, can be felt as movement throughout the entire structure. From the intimate entrance to the large open plan living space, this interaction between the perpendicular and the oblique defines a certain perception that pervades the experience of the structure.

Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
View on the terrace – second floor © Boysplaynice
Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
Detail of the west façade out of plaster done in the traditional old technique © Boysplaynice
Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
View of the ground floor flat © Boysplaynice

The outlines and the façade of the new house are reminiscent of the unique and traditional craftwork of Viennese houses. In the last decades, this craftsman work has largely been given over in favor of the standardized use of polystyrene and external plaster.

Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
View of the living room in the last floor © Boysplaynice
Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
Foto of the hidden bathroom in the last floor © Boysplaynice
Villa in Percvhtoldsdorf | Jan Proksa – Architect
View of the living room in the last floor © Boysplaynice

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