Apartment No. 10 + Office n.º 1 – Limburg
Tim Van de Velde
製品スペックシート

エレメントブランド商品名
CabinetsInvestwood
Lavatory, bathroom washbasinsRoca
メーカーBarrisol - Normalu Sas
Kitchen mixerGROHE
Atrio, Minta kitchen mixer, Atrio
Drawer front panelDupont Corian
Glacier White, Solid Surface Glacier White
FloorAmop Synergies
Mono K

製品スペックシート
Lavatory, bathroom washbasins
Roca さんの Inspira
メーカー
Kitchen mixer
GROHE さんの Atrio, Minta kitchen mixer, Atrio
Drawer front panel
Dupont Corian さんの Glacier White, Solid Surface Glacier White
Floor
Amop Synergies さんの Mono K

Apartment No. 10 + Office n.º 1 – Limburg

Camarim 建築家 として

This project is located in Genk, a town in Belgian Limburg at a convenient distance to Antwerp, Brussels and Cologne. Our clients acquired an apartment and an adjacent office in a building under construction and commissioned us to design their interiors with a peculiar statement: the project should evoke Portugal.

photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde
photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde

Having lived in Belgium for a few years, we remember the feebleness of natural light, and wondered how we could load that light with intensity and warmth. We started by testing traditional Southern materials – ceramic, terrazzo, terracotta tiles – but they didn't seem to lay well in that building in Genk. Among the many materials we have in the office, we found a box of dyed HDF samples. One of the samples has the colour and texture of common terracotta tiles, but the lightness and versatility of a plant-based material: it allows you to make walls, doors, cabinets and shelves.

photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde
photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde

We worked this material like the skin of a body; a body that expands and contracts, that leans against the walls and detaches from them, distinguishing and articulating spaces. When expanding, this body becomes inhabitable, opening spaces impregnated with colour and texture. When contracting, it creates corners or backgrounds that just temper the light and colour of simple and silent spaces.

photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde
photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde

Apartment and office share the same compositional and material strategy – as close relatives – although the office includes an additional material: brushed aluminium. This material envelops a central volume which houses secondary spaces and distinguishes work and meeting spaces. The aluminium has a similar tone to the reconstituted stone of the floor, but its shine combines with the dyed HDF and makes light even more tangible.

Both projects encompass, in addition to architecture, lighting and furniture. The office also has a set of wonderful etchings by José Pedro Croft.

photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde
photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde

Team:
Architect: Camarim
Other participants: Vasco Matias Correia, Patrícia Ferreira de Sousa, Joana Ramos
Photography: Tim Van de Velde

photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde
photo_credit Tim Van de Velde
Tim Van de Velde

Material Used:
Apartment
1. Flooring: Orange Ceramic
2. Flooring: Light grey reconstituted stone, AMOP
3. Wall cladding, Doors, Cabinets, Shelves: Orange HDF, Valchromat
4. Kitchen countertop: Red Namibian granite
5. Bathroom walls: Pink marble from Borba

Office
1. Flooring: Orange and black ceramic
2. Flooring: Light grey reconstituted stone, AMOP
3. Wall cladding, Doors, Cabinets, Shelves: Orange HDF, Valchromat
4. Wall cladding, Doors: Brushed aluminium

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