Kammerl House

Klaus-Peter Gast

Description

Building a detached house within a high-density inner-city development near high-rise housing usually presents architects with a special challenge. Here in Munich the urban development requirement was to fit the building in with an estate-like series of similarly dimensioned homes. The new building was also to be divided into a residential section with a smaller one beside it, usually to provide a garage. Andreas Meck and Stephan Koeppel solved the problem consummately by not accepting the simple, essentially random categorization of these sections, but by tying both parts together to an integrated figure. The house with its distanced carport thus forms a design unit, achieved by the use of a long connecting wall built into the body of the building, and also by choosing homogeneous material for the outer skin in the form of timber cladding. The cubic shape of the building and the ‘notch’ taken out of it, in other words the powerful incision made into the structural mass, support this intention. This creates an inner courtyard, surrounded by the protecting wall-screen of the outer skin, which prevents the plot from being overlooked, defines the outline of the building and shows off the intense colours inside the building. On the ground floor it offers the accesses from north and south, an office/guest room and the living room with kitchen and dining area, facing both the courtyard and the garden. There are three bedrooms upstairs, protected from prying eyes by the two-storey screen wall on the south side. The courtyard develops into an interesting specific place in the building disposition, creating identity and at the same time representing inside and outside, intimacy and openness. This shaded and ventilated area is particularly inviting to the occupants in the summer; here they have a core space available with the wall configuration of the house spiralling into it.

Drawings

This browser does not support PDFs.Site plan

This browser does not support PDFs.Axonometric diagram with the position of the living room and courtyard

This browser does not support PDFs.Ground floor with main entrances, carport, courtyard and living area

This browser does not support PDFs.Second floor with bedrooms

This browser does not support PDFs.Cross section

Photos

Exterior view of the house with garage in the inner-city structure

Exterior view of the house side with courtyard and fireplace


Originally published in: Klaus-Peter Gast, Living Plans: New Concepts for Advanced Housing, Birkhäuser, 2005.

Building Type Housing

Morphological Type Detached Building

Urban Context Suburbia

Architect Andreas Meck, Stephan Koeppel

Year 1999

Location Munich

Country Germany

Geometric Organization Linear

Number of Units 1

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Solid Construction

Access Type Courtyard Access, Street Access

Layout Corridor/Hallway, Duplex/Triplex

Outdoor Space of Apartment Patio

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Additional Information Family home on a built-up inner-city site
Masonry construction with larch cladding

Program Live/Work

Client 235 m²

Map Link to Map