Archello Awards 2025: Open for Entries! Submit your best projects now.
Archello Awards 2025: Open for Entries!
Submit your best projects now.

An Extension on the Vineyard

An Extension on the Vineyard
Studio Module

An Extension on the Vineyard

The addition to this family home was designed for the owners, who wanted more living space and panoramic views of sunsets over the vineyard.

The existing structure, a contemporary local-style villa, is an H-shaped house. Since its construction in 1998, the owners’ space requirements have changed. The goal of the project was to add more rooms, and to showcase the surrounding landscape.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

Site integration

The existing house overlooks vineyards dotted with training wires strung on steel stakes with a rusty patina. The contemporary structure of the addition is directly inspired by that landscape, characterized by strong vertical and horizontal lines.

The addition’s geometry is grounded in the proportions of the house in the extension of its existing façades. The flat roof is a line of force in the landscape.

photo_credit Mahos Architectes
Mahos Architectes

The metal structure containing the new rooms is framed by the existing house and the load-bearing wall that braces it.

Metal and glass are intended to make the project disappear into the surrounding landscape. Moreover, the brownish-red colour coordinates with the house’s cornice and red shutters.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

Interior/exterior

A versatile, fully glassed-in living area benefits from its dual east/west orientation. A bedroom and a shower room complete the floor. The view through the windows is unaffected when the bedroom door is open. The bathroom is both well-lit and private, thanks to its frosted glass.

photo_credit David Maurel
David Maurel

When the windows are wide open, the breeze wafts through, as in a hilltop cabin, and a cantilevered deck further extends the interior space. The boundary between inside and outside is thus obscured.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

Music room

A basement music room was built for rehearsals and private concerts. It is accessed through the existing house, making it possible to keep the addition independent, like a small dwelling unit.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

The main room is a very well-lit space, thanks to picture windows that admit abundant natural light and create a powerful link with the outdoors.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

The music room, measuring 30m2 (323 sq. ft.), was designed according to an acoustic study, and includes plywood bench seating, matching the adjacent floor. A wall of cabinets gives the room a variable geometry that absorbs sound, while also providing everyday storage space. Carpets and fabrics are also used to improve the room’s acoustics.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

The tiered benches in the music room are the result of an interesting technical constraint: the foundations of the addition had to be offset from the existing façade. To avoid losing space, the architects decided to create seats that fulfill that structural requirement, while enhancing the interior space.

This versatile room can be transformed into a home theatre, bedroom, rehearsal space, recording studio, or intimate concert hall.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

Technical challenges

Coordination with the contractors and engineers throughout the design and construction phases changed and enriched the project in both its structural features and finishing work.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

The project had a mixed framework, and the junctions between metal elements and masonry were handled with special care. The use of recessed joints, with U-shaped metal pieces, made it possible to forego the parge coat and highlight the normal-profile I-beams.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

Rather than adding a new element to the project, the architects used the same structural modules to create downspouts, with rainwater flowing along the I-beams.

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

The security grates over the windows were replaced with a terracotta lattice, a very common feature in the region. This mashrabiya system mutes direct sunlight and enables continuous airflow.

photo_credit David Maurel
David Maurel

Team:

Architects: Mahos architectes

Plumbing: Energie PCS

Structural engineering: I2C structure

Photos: Studio Module & David Maurel

photo_credit Studio Module
Studio Module

Materials Used:

Masonry, rough work, plastering, painting, electrical: Promazur

Metal structure: Bernabeu ferronnerie

Roofing/weatherproofing: Histoire de toit

photo_credit Mahos Architectes
Mahos Architectes
Share or Add An Extension on the Vineyard to your Collections