A treat for enjoyers of corrugated metal. 🏭📏

波板フェチの皆さま、お待たせしました。⛓️🧱

#nagoya #streetphotography #ricohgr #ricohgr3 #griiix #japan #monochrome #corrugatedmetal

Resilience in ridges: corrugated metal and fiberglass stand as steadfast sentinels, shielding the no-nonsense abodes within. 🛡️🏠

波形の強さ:波形の金属とファイバーグラスが、中の質実剛健な住居を守る不動の番人として立っています。🏚️💪

#streetphotography #griiix #ricoh_gr #ricohgr #ricohgr3 #aichi #nagoya #japan #corrugatedmetal #monochrome

Corrugated metal whispers tales of resilience while its translucent fiberglass companion allows light to play through its ribbed surface, a symphony in waves and light. 🏚️🌥️

波形の金属が耐久性の物語をささやき、その透明なファイバーグラスの仲間は光をリブ面を通して遊ばせ、波と光のシンフォニーを奏でます。🌆✨

#corrugatedmetal #urbanphotography #streetphotography #monochrome #ricohgr #aichi #nagoya #japan

A corrugated metal home stands patched and proud. Frosted glass veils its secrets, offering a whisper of privacy in a world of steel and angles. Harsh to some, sanctuary to others. 🏠🔩

名古屋の産業バレエの抱擁の中で、波板金の家が繕われ、誇りを持って立っています。曇りガラスがその秘密を隠し、鋼と角の世界にプライバシーのささやきを提供します。厳しいと感じる人もいれば、他の人にとっては聖域です。🏭🖤

#urbanphotography #industrialbeauty #corrugatedmetal #home #ricohgr #aichi #nagoya #japan #streetphotography #monochrome

Wooden terrace acts as "additional room" for Polish house by UGO

A blank exterior clad in corrugated metal conceals a large terrace at this holiday home, which architecture studio UGO has created close to a lake in Wielkopolska, Poland.

The summer residence, called Terrace With a House by the Lake, was designed by Poznań studio UGO to create the feeling of being immersed in nature while having a minimal impact on its rural site.

UGO has created a Polish holiday home with a blank exterior

With an exterior informed by nearby agricultural structures, the U-shaped building encloses a 120-metre-long wooden terrace that UGO designed as an "additional room" for the home.

"The huge terrace is a place for living, resting and eating for the inhabitants of the house," explained the studio.

Corrugated metal lines parts of the exterior

"Its slightly raised platform was intended to allow the household members to commune with nature, without interfering with it," UGO continued.

"The result was not so much a house with a terrace, but a terrace with a house."

The blank exterior conceals a large terrace

Sliding doors create a seamless connection between the terrace and a central living, dining and kitchen area, which looks out in the direction of the lake through double-height glazing.

At either side of this living space are two wings containing the bedrooms. These have their own private connections to the terrace, with seating areas sheltered from the central space by deep cut-outs.

The terrace acts as additional living space for the home

Above the bedrooms are mezzanine areas, providing further sleeping spaces that open onto a roof terrace.

"The side wings additionally protect against the wind and provide full privacy for vacationing residents," said the studio.

[

Read:

Mountain house in Poland has glazed cut between gables

](https://www.dezeen.com/2020/01/27/house-mountains-kropka-studio-poland-architecture/)

The corrugated metal of the exterior is contrasted by Siberian larch panelling in areas where guests have the "most frequent contact", such as the entrance areas and around the courtyard.

Inside, the furniture and materials have been chosen to reflect the colours and textures of the landscape outside, with minimal finishes that retain focus on the home's large windows.

It is lined with Siberian larch

Oversized metal gutters line the edges of the house, with protruding brackets that direct rainwater to irrigate the surrounding plants.

Protruding from the roof is a distinctive cone-shaped chimney that provides ventilation for a fireplace in the living room, as well as ducting for a heat pump.

Large windows frame outward views

Alongside the path leading into the main home is an additional smaller building, providing storage space for two cars and a motorboat.

Other Polish houses featured on Dezeen include a lakeside cottage by HOLA Design that incorporates large windows to frame outward views and a gabled house by Kropka Studio that references local agricultural buildings.

_The photography is byAlex Shoots Buildings. _

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#all #architecture #residential #poland #terraces #houses #corrugatedmetal #holidayhomes #polishhouses

Lucas Maino Fernandez completes Casa Un Patio in dense Chilean forest

Native ferns and trees grow within the centre of this home in Molco, Chile, which architect Lucas Maino Fernandez designed to establish continuity between the living spaces and the surrounding forest.

Casa Un Patio, which roughly translates to Courtyard House, is located near Lake Villarica in central Chile. It sits between the lake and a volcano of the same name, on a remote and rugged site.

Native ferns and trees grow within the centre of Casa Un Pation

"The terrain is characterized by its dense and young vegetation and difficult access," said Lucas Maino Fernandez, who is based in the capital Santiago.

The architect wanted to create a strong relationship to the home's natural surroundings and chose to organise the living spaces around a lush central courtyard.

Lucas Maino Fernandez built the house in a dense Chilean forest

"The central operation of the proposal is to create an interior void, with the purpose of enhancing a portion of the forest, framing the context of the sector, and integrating the existing vegetation into the house," Maino Fernandez said.

"This elemental intention introduces this natural element to the project from the center, and not only from the perimeter, as it would have with a closed volume," he added.

The home is arranged around a lush central courtyard

The architect incorporated a parking space beneath the first storey of the 223-square-metre residence. A corridor with windows onto the courtyard leads to the open-plan kitchen, living and dining room.

In addition to overlooking the courtyard, the communal areas lead out onto a covered terrace that meets the site's grade at the back of the home.

A gentle staircase links the two sides of the house

"Here, the perimeter transparency of these spaces generates continuity with the outer forest," explained Maino Fernandez.

A gradual staircase leads to the upper level, where the bedrooms are located. They share a corridor that is fully glazed but faces the interior garden.

[

Read:

Triangular embeds PR House on a forested hillside in Chile

](https://www.dezeen.com/2022/01/14/pr-house-triangular-forested-hillside-chile/)

According to the architect, this allows for passive heating within the home, as the surrounding trees block out much of the area's natural light.

"Another aspect that the interior patio solves has to do with providing light and heat to the project since the lushness of the forest produces a dark and cool environment," he said.

Altogether, the home encompasses three bedrooms, including a guest room on the ground floor.

Wooden flooring, window frames and walls feature in Casa Un Patio

The material palette inside matches the natural surroundings: wood flooring, window frames, and walls bring warmth to the interiors.

Meanwhile, facade materials were selected for their durability, low maintenance, and ease of assembly. They include black corrugated metal sheets, polycarbonate panels, and ornamental wood shutters.

Facade materials like black corrugated metal sheets were chosen for durability

Other remote homes in Chile include a ski cabin that was built atop the foundations of a previous failed construction project, and a lakeside home that sits on stilts to create a covered exterior space.

The photography is byMarcos Zegers.

Project credits:

Architects: Lucas Maino Fernandez
Lead architect: Lucas Maino
Design team: Catalina Briones, Macarena Gonzalez
Engineering: Matias Zuñiga

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#all #architecture #residential #instagram #houses #corrugatedmetal #polycarbonate #holidayhomes #chile #chileanhouses

Graal Architecture's Orly Festival Hall references residential and industrial buildings

This multipurpose events hall designed by French studio Graal Architecture evokes typical gabled houses as well as the industrial sheds found near to its location beside Paris-Orly airport.

Orly Festival Hall is located on the edge of the airport complex to the south of Paris, and forms part of a suburban neighbourhood made up of residential and logistical buildings.

Graal Architecture has created a festival hall in France

Graal Architecture designed the festival hall as a pavilion consisting of four interconnected gabled volumes that resemble typical houses. Its flexible and modular design allows the building to be used for various events.

Corrugated and perforated metal cladding forms a rectilinear envelope around the pitched-roof volumes, lending it a more industrial appearance that recalls the nearby sheds and warehouses.

The building comprises four interconnected gabled volumes

"Halfway between a low-cost prefabricated industrial structure and an ordinary house, the building unfolds in two cubic volumes of the same dimensions, which attempt to move away from the typology of the shed to approach the domestic scale of the house," the architects explained.

The metal cladding extends beyond the height of the pitched roofs, creating a more visible volume within the suburban streetscape that changes in appearance when viewed from different distances and angles.

The volumes are wrapped by corrugated and perforated metal cladding

"Through its champagne colour, its undulations and perforations, the thermo-lacquered, corrugated iron cladding offers a changing and renewed image of the facility through the play of reflections and transparency," Graal Architecture added.

"Depending on the light, the distance and the viewpoint, which is multiple on this angled plot, the building creates a real kinetic effect."

[

Read:

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](https://www.dezeen.com/2015/09/16/graal-architecture-nursery-school-kindergarten-paris-france-corrugated-metal-cabins/)

The building is separated into two conjoined blocks that are shifted slightly in plan to fit the irregularly shaped plot. The space in the offset area forms an entrance plaza sheltered from the noisy airport.

A block of service areas including the entrances, toilets, offices and technical spaces are arranged along the northern edge of the building so they are direct contact with the car park and a small concrete plaza.

It has a champagne-hued colour

Three entrances along the building's length provide access to different parts of the hall, allowing each space to function independently and enhancing the facility's flexibility.

The building was constructed using a timber frame that is visible inside the hall and is complemented by the exposed timber walls and structural roof panels.

The prefabricated framework is visible inside the hall

The prefabricated framework supports a series of deep beams that span the hall from front to back. Tracks incorporated into the beams allow movable walls to be used to partition the interior into two or three rooms.

The four roof ridges help to visually separate the open, flexible space into smaller bays while also aiding its acoustic properties. Each bay features large windows on its southern facade that look out towards the airport.

Skylights slot into the roof's ridge

Lighting and acoustic baffles that follow the folds of the roof help to break up the overall scale of the internal space. Skylights slotted into the roof's ridge cast natural light onto the timber beams and the concrete floor below.

Graal Architecture was founded by Carlo Grispello and Nadine Lebeau. The firm has previously designed an energy-efficient and economical facility for small children that was longlisted in the civic building category of Dezeen Awards 2021, and a sports hall for a nursery in western Paris comprising three corrugated zinc and galvanised steel cabins.

The photography is byClément Guillaume.

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#all #architecture #publicandleisure #france #modulararchitecture #corrugatedmetal #perforatedmetalfacades #perforatedmetal #graalarchitecture

Reddymade and Ai Weiwei add hexagonal extension to Salt Point home

Architecture studio Reddymade has collaborated with Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei to design a corrugated metal extension with hexagonal ends for a weekend home in Salt Point, New York.

The local studio drew on the hexagonal plan of the original 1980s home to create the minimal, linear form of Salt Point Residence, with 185 square metres providing space for two new en-suite bedrooms around a central living room.

Reddymade and Ai Weiwei gave the extension a hexagonal end section to reference the shape of the original building's plan

"The existing residence is composed of a cluster of hexagonal pavilions. For the new structure, we transposed this hexagonal plan to shape the section for the addition," explained Reddymade.

"The extension was designed to be strikingly simple and minimal, which is reflected not only in its graphic language, but also in its materiality."

From a distance, the extension looks like an industrial barn

A glass corridor leads from the original home to the centre of the extension, where two angled wings meet in a simple living room, conceived as the form's central "hinge".

The long, thin wings then both extend past bathroom blocks towards glazed ends, which open onto private porches to give each of the new bedrooms a close connection with the surrounding landscape.

Corrugated metal clads the extension's two wings

At the extension's southern end, this porch has been given a mirrored wall fitted with an outdoor shower, facing a cut-out in the wall that frames the landscape.

White walls and ceilings, and pale wooden floors characterise the simple interiors, which express the pitched roof created by the hexagonal section.

While most of the focus on the landscape is via the glazed porches, a series of small windows in the side of the extension give views across the home's gently sloping site.

Bedrooms at each end open onto terraces

"The minimal material palette of the extension offers a neutral and light setting for art works and furniture from the client's private collection," said the studio.

"Throughout the new structure, large square windows are set low to frame the outward view and enhance the experience of the home's natural settings."

White walls and ceilings, and pale wooden floors are used throughout the interior

The artworks that dot the landscape indicate the proximity to Artfarm – a private art gallery designed in 2009 by Swiss practice HHF, also in collaboration with Ai Weiwei.

The metal exterior of Artfarm, reminiscent of agricultural barns, informed the corrugated cladding of Salt Point Home, which from a distance also appears as a simple metal barn until you notice its hexagonal ends.

The house is located opposite the Artfarm centre in Upstate New York

Reddymade recently worked with Google to design the company's first physical retail space in New York's Chelsea, incorporating cork furniture and recycled materials.

The photography is byAshok Sinha.

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#residential #all #architecture #usa #metal #houses #corrugatedmetal #aiweiwei #residentialextensions #americanhouses #newyorkhouses #newyork #reddymade

Reddymade and Ai Weiwei add hexagonal extension to Salt Point home

Architecture studio Reddymade has collaborated with Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei to design a corrugated metal extension with hexagonal ends for a weekend home in Salt Point, New York.

Coopworth residence is a modern take on a traditional Tasmanian farmhouse

Melbourne firm FMD Architects has completed a farmhouse in rural Tasmania featuring a plywood-lined interior and corrugated metal cladding that references vernacular agricultural buildings.

The Coopworth house, which is located on Bruny Island off the southeastern coast of Tasmania, is named after the Coopworth sheep reared by the property's owners.

Top: the house is located in a rural area of Tasmania. Above: it was wrapped in corrugated metal

The house sits atop a hill surrounded by arable farmland and was designed by FMD Architects as a contemporary take on the farmhouses and shacks found throughout the area.

"The site's resident Coopworth sheep, the wide-ranging views to the water and mountain ranges beyond, as well as the weathering red lead shacks dotted over the island provide an ever-changing landscape with which the house converses," the architects said.

Geometrically shaped windows punctuate the roof

The building occupies a compact footprint to retain as much land as possible, and its design seeks to create spaces with generous proportions that make the most of the internal volume.

The main living areas feature sloping ceilings that follow the angled roofline. The space is lined with plywood panels, except for parts of the ceiling that show off wool insulation sourced from the farm's sheep.

"Sealed with clear, polycarbonate corrugated sheeting, the wool adds to the thermal performance, while celebrating the agricultural connections as an abstract wool fresco," FMD Architects added.

It has a floor-to-ceiling glazed wall

Coopworth's northern elevation incorporates full-height frameless windows that create a strong connection with the outdoors.

The glazing is pushed to the edge of the building envelope, where it siths within timber-lined niches that provide places to relax while creating a feeling of being immersed in the landscape.

The plywood-clad living area contains a wood-burning stove and a low storage unit that separates the kitchen and dining space from the lounge.

Two bedrooms are positioned at the western end of the ground floor, with a laundry room and bathroom situated behind the central stair.

Wool insulation is visible in the ceiling

The main bathroom features a sunken bath incorporated into a brick-tiled volume that evokes the chimney stacks found on vernacular buildings.

A large window flanking the bath provides the bather with views of the surrounding paddock and the bay beyond.

A large wooden island zones the kitchen

The staircase provides access to a mezzanine study area and attic bedroom. Both spaces are slotted in beneath the steeply pitched roof and receive daylight from angular openings.

Coopworth is designed for two occupants, but can accommodate family and friends thanks to various informal sleeping options inspired by Australian verandah sleepouts and caravan bunk beds.

A staircase has storage below

Sunken beds incorporated into the window bays can be used as sleeping mats, while a single bed is hidden within a wall of plywood joinery next to the staircase.

FMD Architects is headed by Fiona Dunin and aims to create buildings informed by their context and clients.

Bedrooms look out to the fields

The studio works predominantly on boutique commercial, hospitality and residential projects. Its previous work includes a house in Melbourne featuring wooden columns and beams inspired by sewing details.

Photography is byDianna Snape.

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#all #architecture #residential #corrugatedmetal #tasmania #farmhouses #fmdarchitects