Rieteiland House by Hans van Heeswijk Architects
Hans van Heeswijk Architects have designed the Rieteiland House in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Description from Hans van Heeswijk Architects
The Rieteiland House was designed on a plot of land that is part of a newly established island at IJburg on the outskirts of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. It asked for a house that is completely orientated on the panoramic views to the park and the landscape.
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The boxlike street facade is completely cladded with perforated horizontal aluminium panels, of which some can open automatically to make way for the windows behind them. The facade on the waterside is completely made out of glass sheets and sliding doors.
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The house is an alongated rectangular block of three floors and a basement. Inside, the space literally opens up. Most of the floors have a double hight and are open. In this way the house can be seen as a sort of spatial grandstand. By this on every level a panoramic view is created towards the west, the water and the park. Every night from the house magnificent sunsets can be watched. This creates a special holiday like atmosphere. In the core of the house, a three floors tall service block/tower contains toilets on each floor, storage spaces, installation shafts and a dumbwaiter.
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Apart from the house also some of the furniture was designed especially for this project. Special attention has been given to sustainability and saving energy. A cold and heat pump, thermal energy storage and solar collectors are used for this purpose.
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Architects: Hans van Heeswijk Architects
Photography: Imre Csany/Csany Studio

































soledad elgueta on 07 Feb 2013 at 10:38 pm #
ESPECTACULAR.
Allan Lamb on 07 Feb 2013 at 11:22 pm #
nice job,spelling + translation needs some work
Geoffrey Finkel on 09 Feb 2013 at 9:28 am #
Cool contemporary and architectural interior space – monumental scale & transparency make this an impressive space
Frank on 15 Feb 2013 at 7:52 pm #
This is beautiful but very non energy efficient due to all the glass. Now the owners will have to pay quadruple energy bills for the next 50 years. Think about the long term cost. If this houses was in a benign climate then it would be no problem.
Sean on 19 Feb 2013 at 8:32 am #
Are those green slats on the third pic just pieces of glass used as cladding/screen?