| House in Grunewald
Location: Berlin-Grunewald Client: private Area: 475sq m BFG Construction time: 2005 - 2006 Colaborators: Marcus Schroeger, David Ruic, Anja Koch, Yoichi Osaki In the cluttered woodland of the Berlin Grunewald, HSH, Hoyer Schindele Hirschmueller have produced a freestanding house of that is both striking and comfortable in its context. The hope of the client was to have a largely private house, with a very open ground plan inside but which would compliment a series of flexible, more public spaces outside. The sculptural design of this building expresses the opposition of the two: The form of the building looks almost cubist, as a multitude of clean but twisted surfaces run-into and overlap eachother forming the outer skin, before diving into the interior of the home. Inside, the layout of the rooms is determined by the movement of the sun and the daily routines of the inhabitants. The biggest openings, in the living room, lie to the north where as to the neighbouring lane-way, we are presented only with small, select opening, carefully positioned to catch the moring sun but to keep out most of the summer heat The design aestheics center around a principal of joining precise vertical and horizontal slabs using a pipe-like „bending“. This process very sculpturaly joins all the surfaces together almost as one entity, whilst still articulating each vertical or horizontal element. |





