Beam House by Uri Cohen Architects
Uri Cohen Architects designed the Beam House in Arbel, Israel.
.
Description from the architects:
This home has been designed for a client who wished to build his home next to his farm. The design combines some of the utilitarian images of the agriculture buildings in that area with the fascination to the ‘beams’ construction of a ‘country home’.
The house is divided in three parallel strips: private, semi private and public. By doing so, the possibility exists to have the one (living) part with the (northern) light open to the yard and the view. The pirvate (southern) part is closed by concrete walls. Between the public and semi public spaces stands a thick wall which contains the utilities such as the air conditioning system, storage spaces, toilets, etc.
The beams of the roof rests on that ‘central concrete wall’ and candeliver to the living area. This keeps the northern glass façade free of columns. The area between the private and public area of the house becomes kind of a shaded ‘outside space’ which is also the entrance axis for the house.
Visit the website of Uri Cohen Architects – here.
Photography by David Adika
.
.






















Maarit on 04 Apr 2012 at 10:30 pm #
I like the way the angular columns and beams meet the rounded concrete wall. And that bedroom pic is the most beautiful I’ve seen in a long time.
eva on 08 Apr 2012 at 1:40 am #
cool idea
shlomo weiss on 11 Apr 2012 at 4:00 am #
well never liked architecture in Israel but this one is an especially ugly example.
The guy has no clue about proportions and the interiors are just disgusting, sorry