Influenced by the old slate roofs with curved shapes and carried by rafters which bend under the weight of the stone -or by pieces of framework which were not all straight- and in opposition to the stiffness of the strictly flat roofs from the modern period, this house is covered with a flexible and overflowing roof, convex on one side, concave on the other side. The roof is opened to the South to catch the winter sun, and closed to the North to protect the house from the winds.
Under the roof, the shell consists is made of a larch module, filled or glazed, with fixed or openening window, which breaks the walls down to a familiar scale of the human body.
Inside, the whole volume under the framework is visible from everywhere, but never completely visible, which provides privacy in this unit shell.
In order to show and highlight the work of the four craftsmen who participated in the construction of the house, the concrete slab shaped by the mason is left untreated, the frame house is showcased and visible from everywhere, the electric cables run along the structural pieces without hiding themself, and the second work is entirely made of birch plywood…
Material Used:
1. Raw concrete slab, northern fir, black pre-patinated zinc with standing seam, larch frame and larch veneer
2. Heating: Wood burner
3. Interior furnitures: Birch plywood and local solid ash (Egoïne).