Enjoy 2 free articles a month. For unlimited access, get a membership now.

Residential Barn Zurich

BE Architektur | Boris Egli

SAVE SUBMISSION
Bronze
Living room - Vito Stallone
Dining room / Kitchen - Vito Stallone
Airspace - Vito Stallone
Living room - Vito Stallone

1 / 16

Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
JURY VOTES
House
5.87
6.49
6.34
5.64
6.08
Anda Zota
Anda Zota Editor in Chief at Igloo
7.37
7.77
8.29
7.6
7.76
Filip Janssen
Filip Janssen Founder at Zware Jongens
Stripped down to the essence but tr...
6.25
6.5
7.8
6.8
6.84
Claudio Pironi
Claudio Pironi CEO at Claudio Pironi & Partners
6
7
7.5
5
6.38
Talar Bardakjian
Talar Bardakjian Creative Director at ODG
Ethereal...
7.5
7.5
9
5.5
7.38
Andre Flinterhoff
Andre Flinterhoff Cofounder at Archicon Architectural Intelligence
6.5
7.5
7.5
5.5
6.75
Bart Veen
Bart Veen Experience Designer at Bart.Agency
Stunning. Very inspiring to see how...
8
7
9
6.5
7.63
Christina Wissing Oppermann
Christina Wissing Oppermann Commercial Director at Brandt Collective
7.98
7.36
8.45
6.88
7.67
Peter Culley
Peter Culley Founder and Creative Director at Spatial Affairs Bureau
7.24
7.31
6.95
5
6.63
Stephanie Ledoux
Stephanie Ledoux Partner at AW²
7.2
7.09
7.55
7.15
7.25
Arne Schultchen
Arne Schultchen Founder and Creative Director at design for human nature
Iconic enlightenment...
7
7
7.5
5.5
6.75
Salone
Salone Founder at Salone del Salon
7.74
7.24
7.02
7.1
7.28
Tanya Khanna
Tanya Khanna Founder at Epistle
6.3
6.28
6.47
6.2
6.31
Floor area
215 ㎡
Completion
2022
Verputz Grundbasismaterial aus Quarzsand, Kalk und Weisszement

Residential barn in a hamlet zone, Reppischtal, Zurich

Around 15 buildings form a hamlet zone in a rural, mainly agricultural setting. This new home in the hamlet feels obliged to honor the area’s historical context. Typical barn characteristics were taken up and reinterpreted in a modern way. From a distance, the residence discreetly blends into its rustic surroundings. The exterior facade is clad in glazed spruce wood – the same type of timber used on traditional Swiss barns. A pitched roof was designed in the same vein, with tile roofing typical to the local architecture. Openable windows are concealed behind wooden shutters, while the generous fixed glazing is fronted by wooden sliding doors that provide sun protection, darkening, and privacy. A raw steel beam serves as a gutter, jutting out beyond the base of the roof. Downpipes were omitted; the rainwater drains off the side like a waterfall.

The building responds to the topography of the site. Building on a slope usually requires excavation behind the building and backfilling in front; this approach was deliberately rejected. Instead, the ground floor is arranged in a series of levels at different heights to follow the existing slope.

A barn is typically used for storage and as a workroom for agricultural production. Although this new building is not a depository, its rooms – bedrooms, bathrooms, closets, etc. – are “stored” within it as closed volumes and are figuratively stacked on top of one another. This “stacking” creates a sculptural interior, a positive spatial volume within the building. A negative volume forms around these stacks, comprising a landscape of open living spaces that are interconnected vertically and horizontally. A generous interior unfolds with a sense of endless expanse.

The new building reinterprets the simple, unadorned nature of a traditional barn through its choice of materials. Exposed concrete slabs for the floor and a special plaster covering the walls ensure a raw, unfinished feel. Two different materials with a similar effect – concrete and plaster – are used throughout the interior to achieve an expressive effect.

The freestanding two-car garage in exposed concrete was created using the same timber formwork as that used for the house facade. A photovoltaic system was installed on the gently sloping concrete gable roof, the solar panels covering the surface like a carpet.

The new home enters into a thematic dialogue with the surrounding agricultural buildings for a unique interpretation of the vernacular barn typology.