MIKI 1 House by Alexander Brenner Architects
Alexander Brenner Architects designed the MIKI 1 House in Stuttgart, Germany.
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From the street, the north facade, which is composed of cubes and wall slabs, appears largely solid, and gives the impression of a single, de-tached villa. However, two individual city villas were realised behind this shared facade, whose different floor plans correspond to the needs and lifestyles of the respective inhabitants. While the villas have almost the same floor area, the western half of the duplex has a multi-room plan suitable for a family, whereas the eastern half was designed with an open, flowing room concept.
The generous stairs with twelve steps leads from the road to the en-trance level. The entrances are invisibly integrated into the surface structure of the ground floor.Additionally, the eastern half of the duplex offers direct access via the
garage. Past a glazed wine cellar, a 14-metre long dressing room with fitted wardrobes leads to the bathing area and the bedroom. In front of the bedroom is the swimming pool, which is heated all year round by solar collectors on the roof. A single-flight stair way, which is lit from above, connects all three levels of the house.For the spacious two-storey room on the ground floor the architect designed a detached concrete kitchen counter and a dining table, whose concrete base supports a seemingly hovering timber tabletop, which is illuminated from below. The living area, the lounge zone and the work-space on the gallery are flooded with light entering through the glass facade on the south side, facing the view. At night, the lights in the in-terior play on the glass facade, blending with reflections of the city, the landscape and the pool.
Visit the Alexander Brenner Architects website – here.
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Joseph on 15 Feb 2012 at 7:24 am #
Very nice indeed…
But if I have this money, I would have it all. This house is not meant to be shared methinks. Well maybe I would shrink the square footage in order to gain more yard space and have trees here and there…
FJ on 15 Feb 2012 at 11:07 am #
Daus ist ein “crisp” Haus!
Maarit on 15 Feb 2012 at 12:47 pm #
Very elegant! I liked the various fixed counters which makes it possible to furnish the house with very few furniture.
Tom in Denver on 15 Feb 2012 at 2:22 pm #
A beautiful home. I love the way it’s snuggled into the hillside. The photo of the staircase, however, was just a few steps short of an Alfred Hitchcock movie.
Michelle from MD Interior Design on 15 Feb 2012 at 3:45 pm #
I love how they’ve maximised the natural light and the view from the upstairs desk is spectacular!
No No on 18 Feb 2012 at 10:04 pm #
@Joseph, I agree: The west half’s principal view is also to the south, so you’re looking right over your neighbor’s pool. (There is a west view & balcony, but it faces uphill toward the neighbor building.) And vice versa, the pool-owners must cavort right under the neighbor’s window wall. This *must* be some kind of mother-in-law apartment — or maybe a surreptitious professional office that’s been tricked-out to look like a residence until the CO issues.
But perhaps instead, you & I are both lacking that certain “urban sensibility”??? In other words, think of this as a pair of townhouses, only built on a wider lot. As to who would want it, imagine the sort of owner who has enough money to buy a brownstone in New York City, but must put their narrow Japanese moss garden in the back “yard” abutting the alley, and sit on little Conran’s folding chairs, watched over by dozens of neighbors. Not for me, but people do…
@Tom-in-DEN, yes, maybe putting a person (or a Le Corbusier Modulor Man drawing!) entering the landing of the stairwell would have helped. But even with that, it’s still a tall, narrow stairway — just like the traditional **duplex entry stair** that it really is! Wonder if it’s just for photographs, or if the Stuttgart city code allowed no railing? Just imagine the architect justifying it to the inspector: “Not needed, it’s so narrow you just brace your hands on the opposing walls.”