House in Ekali by Thanos Athanasopoulos
Greek architect Thanos Athanasopoulos has completed a house in Ekali, a suburb of Athens.

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Description from the architect:
This single-family house is located in Ekali, a suburban area of Athens. The property is surrounded by high pine trees that shade the lot, which let to the decision to create a continuous openable glass envelope around the south and east sides of the ground floor. The sliding glass walls allow daylight to enter into the deep plan while defining a large open living area, transparent towards the fenced garden. The scheme shapes the main open area on the south-east corner of the site, where the pool is placed attached to the building.
Bedrooms are located on the upper floor, and towards south they hover above the living area as autonomous private units. They are carefully placed to create a generous semi-open space as well as double-height areas at ground level.
The main building volume is covered by a pitched double-curved roof which is clad with conventional ceramic roof tiles. The roof-tile cladding cascades down the surface of the north wall, creating a rainscreen that contributes to the environmental performance of the house and conceptually to the visual impression of a seamless protective blanket.
This element, which provides coherence to the whole scheme reinterpreting the traditional ceramic-tile roof, is part of an attempt to shape an appropriate architectural identity –material and spatial- in a suburban context where traditional imagery and contemporary desires are fused and confused. Our strategy also involved the selection of completely conventional materials and construction methods: white plaster, marble, stone veneer, wood. A typical palette of anonymous greek suburbia is therefore applied, in ways that are not conventional.
Visit Thanos Athanasopoulos’ website – here.
Photography by H. Louizidis
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BjZ on 15 Oct 2010 at 9:36 am #
Full of potential, but i would have liked to see a floor plan to better understand how the structure flows.
ziguei on 16 Oct 2010 at 5:49 am #
very good job but i want to see severals views for exaple in the bathroom
thank you
Maira Evans on 16 Oct 2010 at 5:54 am #
Interesting tryout. The interior is far more interesting though. Exterior leaves me cold.. especially the roof tiles sliding down one side of the outer wall. Open spaces are cool and the double height is what makes the house seem grandiose. Nonetheless, there seem to be quite a few things on the final outlay of the whole building that feel random. Furthermore, heating units a.k.a. panels? why? and the Ross Lovegrove Mercury light is not done justice in that particular dining room. Agree with BjZ. has potential but…..!
Martin on 20 Oct 2010 at 12:23 pm #
I like the sloping roof that is tieled vith the ‘classical’ tiles.