House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior PhotographyHouse of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior PhotographyHouse of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Interior Photography, Windows, Glass, Facade, BalconyHouse of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior PhotographyHouse of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - More Images+ 14

Weiler, Austria
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  185
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Paul Ott
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Bachmann Hannes KEG, Bad Waldsee, Metallbau Neyer GmbH+Co KG, Oberhauser&Schedler Bau GmbH, Tectum GmbH, Zwischenwasser
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House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior Photography
© Paul Ott

Text description provided by the architects. Positioned on a steep hillside along the northeast edge of the settlement, the House of Chambers lays the Rhine Valley directly at your feet. Surprisingly compact, even monolithic, the spatial sculpture digs its way into the slope: a cube and a courtyard in the middle of a wide alpine meadow.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior Photography
© Paul Ott

From the outside, the building reveals little of the interior, opening up only along the diagonal line from the top of the valley to the bottom. The design represents a radical approach, packing the functions in a finely balanced system of chambers, connected geometrically, within which dwells a poetic-philosophic aspect.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior Photography
© Paul Ott

The exposed concrete house dispenses with the recent usual customary strategies of houses with sculptured gardens, retaining walls, and terraces and makes a powerful counterargument: a house, a hillside, a courtyard. The powerful ensemble of cube-shaped houses and entrance courtyard, wedged into the hillside, solves all these tricky slope issues with just these two figures stamped into the landscape.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior Photography
© Paul Ott

They are simply planted into the practically unchanged hill in the middle of a wide alpine meadow. Visitors approaching the building by car or on foot first arrive in the elevated courtyard with its reflecting pool. The corresponding sauna/wellness area, located at street level, is protected from the prying eyes by a wood-paneled courtyard. Cars and people disappear into the underground entrance concealed by the hillside.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Interior Photography, Handrail
© Paul Ott
House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Interior Photography, Stairs
© Paul Ott

The floor plan is based on 4 quadrants of a square = square squared. Three of these are enclosed by monolithic concrete walls, whereas the fourth quadrant is a southwest-facing terrace. The living area on the first aboveground level enjoys afternoon and evening sun. On the higher bedroom level, the building moves in the opposite direction, with the two remaining spatial units also encircling a terrace, but this time to the northeast. The two 'chambers' touch at the 'zero' line on the z-axis.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Image 17 of 19
Plan

The concept dematerializes their structural link to the point of zero, the two rooms being connected instead visually by the space-defining rows of full-height windows and doors on the slope side. The various staircases - spiral and single-flight staircases - respond to the arrangement of rooms and function and set the stage for contemplating the sculpture and its symmetry on a walk-through along the diagonal. Small light wells at the top of the stairs and a skylight above the stairwell reinforce this effect.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Interior Photography, Windows, Glass, Facade, Balcony
© Paul Ott

It is amazing how well geometry, purism, and poetry pair together in this finely balanced design of a hillside house. This build composition skillfully circumvents the usual architectural traps in thinking and at the same time makes an unparalleled dialectical statement.

House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects - Exterior Photography
© Paul Ott

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Cite: "House of Chambers / Marte.Marte Architects" 13 Apr 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/999373/house-of-chambers-martarte-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

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