TITLE: THREE BEDROOM RESIDENTIAL HOUSE.
This residential project explores the nuanced interplay between functionality, material expression, spatial fluidity, and environmental responsiveness, resulting in a three-bedroom self-contained residence that harmonizes modern living with regional vernacular influences. The design adopts an open-concept spatial strategy, anchoring the living, dining, and kitchen zones in a unified volumetric core that fosters visual transparency, social connectivity, and thermal comfort.
Spatial Organization & Circulation
The house is planned as a single-story, orthogonal layout articulated around a central axial spine. All three bedrooms are self-contained en suites, spatially segregated for privacy yet oriented for ease of access from the main public zone. A common washroom is located at a strategic node accessible to guests and the shared areas, without intruding on private quarters.
The open-plan living, dining, and kitchen ensemble is demarcated using subtle ceiling height variations and lighting treatments. The kitchen island, centrally placed, acts as a transitional object blending culinary activity with casual engagement, visually anchoring the space while maintaining spatial porosity. Adjacent to the kitchen is a pantry/store, carefully concealed yet accessible to streamline operational efficiency.
Architectural Language & Materials
The architecture leverages a material palette of rough-cut stone piers, deliberately expressed in the facade to articulate rhythm and grounding. These stonework piers are not merely ornamental but serve as vertical tectonic elements that articulate entry thresholds, structural modulation, and aesthetic permanence. The roof is a four-way hipped tile system, carefully proportioned to reduce heat gain while enhancing rainwater runoff efficiency.
Large fenestration with wide openings dominate the elevation, promoting cross-ventilation, day lighting, and visual permeability between indoor and landscaped zones. In the bedrooms, all windows incorporate projected concrete sills conceived not only as seating or resting ledges but also as functional worktops, blending utilitarianism with comfort.
Environmental Responsiveness & Thermal Strategy
A high ceiling profile across the entire building envelope enhances vertical volume, facilitating passive heat dissipation and natural convection. This volumetric generosity is matched by the use of warm, ambient lighting fixtures suspended strategically to create mood zones and enhance evening usability.
The thermal mass of the stone piers and carefully shaded flower beds along the flanks of the house aid in moderating the building's micro climate. Flower beds also act as soft transitions between built form and natural topography, improving aesthetics while filtering runoff.
Exterior Amenities & Living Extensions
At the entrance, the house opens into a covered front shed flanked by exterior concrete benches, embedded with integrated flower pots providing a sculpted threshold between the exterior and interior realms. This transitional space serves as a resting nook, a micro social node for informal interactions and contemplative use.
A second rear shed, functionally assigned for utility and service access, is located near the kitchen and store, allowing efficient back-of-house operations. Adjacent to the front facade is a designated parking court, laid out to accommodate two vehicles, finished in textured paving blocks that merge durability with permeability.