The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian

The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - Windows, Facade
© Parham Taghioff

The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - CourtyardThe SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - Image 3 of 30The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - Windows, DoorThe SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - CountertopThe SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - More Images+ 25

  • Structure, Mechanical And Electrical: Fathi, Afshari and Hassanzade
  • Client: Farahani Saba
  • Design Team: Mohammad Hossein Izadi, Arian Spridonof, Anahita Vazirnezami, Roujin Gahvarei, Vida Janavi, Mohammad Ghaffari, Ladan Pakzad, Ashkan Farahani Saba, Tabasom Heidari
  • Country: Iran
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Text description provided by the architects. The home is considered as an inseparable concept from the ancient Iranian civilization and culture; linked to the nature, providing freshness and liveliness to its residents. In other words home in its ancient concept is a combination of the building and garden which would place the man within. A humane space enfolding every single detail of nature such as the sweet sound of birds chirping, the melody of water drops on the surface , the touch of the trees, the golden color of the sunrays on the brick structure and the reflection of the building enfolded by the nature in the surface of a pool.

With the change in people’s lifestyle, development of the cities and the uprising demand for constructing high-rise buildings; this valuable heritage of our ancestors efforts in engaging the architecture with nature has gone obliterated, which has changed into a blurred memory over less than a century.

This project was the result of our efforts in revitalizing this lost heritage and giving a new interpretation to the old concept. Which we believe one of the main reasons of the cultural crisis our society is engaged with nowadays is the result of this abrupt shift in the living space.

The street façade is dynamic and movable that changes by apartment dwellers. This double Skin façade tries to have communication with the city, is constructed of a one transparent layer and one movable wooden layer. The saturated woods with 2.40 meters height are located in a rail. This part is designed and made by the cooperation of smithery and casting team during a year of continuous  work with  low cost. The wooden layer is controlled manually by hand. This second layer’s measure of openness and closing is depended on the users’ need for light, privacy and view. In the facade that fronts the garden, the modular flower boxes shape the balustrade of the balcony. This green layer is irrigated by the collection of building used water and rain in a smart drop irrigation procedure.

Detail

the project is situated in a land with 20 meters width and 50 meters length and is located on the south of a 20 meters width street. The 30 meters length of the northern portion of the site plan was our boundaries for constructing the apartment; splitting the connection between the southern yard and the street. With this regulation disconnecting the linkage between the yard and the street, the challenging part was to reconnect this fracture with a solution.

We came up with a solution to lift up the greenery from the street level to the northern façade and to the roof and then again turning into the southern façade and at last rejoining with the garden in the yard. In other words the landscape is formed by linkage between the northern and southern façade and the roof.

The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - Windows, Door
© Hossein Barazandeh

A pragmatic approach to nature and sustainability

First : Local materials and recycled ones from the existing building before construction are used in the construction of the project. Railroad timbers and leftover bricks from the previous structure were washed, processed and used in covering the floor and walls of the yard after 40 years.

Second:  The materials used in construction of the project such as wood, bricks, iron plates and stones are considered as environment friendly materials and are acquired from local resources.

Section

Third:  Using solar energy for supplying the power needed for lighting the common spaces. The energy is collected by the solar panels placed on the roof, saved in a battery and used in time of need.

Forth: the double skin façade facing the street would prevent the heat exchange between indoors and outdoors. The outer shell is a wooden skin with the ability to control the natural lighting and the inner shell is a glass curtain of double-glazed windows providing the indoors with the daylight brightness and nighttime privacy in combination with the outer shell.

The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - Courtyard
© Parham Taghioff

Fifth: As mentioned before we have focused on the idea of the integrating the landscape with the greenery covering the balconies in each floor.

Sixth: With having the water issue of Tehran in our minds we have added a water harvesting system to the project to collect the rainwater from the roof ; to be used for irrigation after filtration.

The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian - Image 3 of 30
© Parham Taghioff

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Project location

Address:Iran

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
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Cite: "The SABA Apartment / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian" 23 Jan 2016. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/780836/the-saba-apartment-sara-kalantary-plus-reza-sayadian> ISSN 0719-8884

© Parham Taghioff

伊朗SABA 公寓 / Sara Kalantary + Reza Sayadian

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