Haus Landsberg Am Lech
Studio RAUCH. Landsberg am Lech, Germany
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Name of work in English
Haus Landsberg Am Lech
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Name of work in original language
HAUS LANDSBERG AM LECH – Vom EFH zum 3FH
Prize year
EUmies Awards 2022
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Work Location
Landsberg am Lech, Germany
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Studio
Studio RAUCH
EUmies Awards 2022 Nominees
Program
Collective housing
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Labels
Compact · Complex
Site area
503 m²
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Client
Rauch / Pflüger
Total gross floor
247 m²
Completion
2019
The project pursues a resilient idea in the compression of a single-family house volume into three apartments with a total of 9 inhabitants, 6 adults and 3 children, each with the qualities of a single-family house in the design approach. The aim of the project is not linear system optimization and energy efficiency, but a maximum sufficiency approach, creative reduction as a design principle. A new, fundamentally resource-saving and social approach is to be shown to the typology of the single-family house, which questions issues such as land consumption, individuality and flexibility of living, redensification, age-appropriate and multi-generational living and would like to show a possible solution, especially in rural areas. In this way, an age-appropriate apartment on the ground floor, a two-story apartment with two roof terraces and an end-row house were created in a single-family house.
The structural volume of a singlefamily house was available for the property thanks to the context and building law. It fits into the old, existing hipped roof structure of the area and interprets it in a contemporary way. The compact new building is deliberately built using a massive brick construction to take greater account of the summer heat protection, which also supports the construction of the roof made of solid crosslaminated timber panels. Ceilings and partitions were made of reinforced concrete, which was largely left visible as a design element.
Concrete walls separate the individual apartments. A conscious decision was made to rely on the massive properties of the material, not only because of the soundproofing, but especially for aesthetic reasons. The “malleable rock” was left in its original state. With its archaic appearance, the concrete contrasts with the white floor and the white-glazed built-in furniture. The ceilings are also untreated. The gray tone of the concrete blends in with the color harmony of the interior and, in combination with the other surfaces, forms an atmospheric whole. The concrete looks lively, warm and provides a stage for objects and furniture.