|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Click
on images for larger views. Many thanks to FLO for the head's
up on this project! [Google Earth link]
The name that architect Valerio
Olgiati gives to his design for the atelier and residence
for singer-songwriter Linard
Bardill -- House for a Musician -- sounds like a project
from an undergraduate architectural design studio, where the
professor asks the student to design for a particular type
of client (painter, musician, physicist). What's missing from
those projects is the fact that houses are made for individuals,
not types, something that is apparent in this house, regardless
of its moniker.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
According to his own web site,
Bardill is "Switzerland’s most successful children’s
songwriter," with "ongoing activities in mainstream
music, such as his work with large and small classical orchestras
and the well-known Swiss jazz band, Mini Geiss Goes Polkajazz."
This balance of the fun and the serious, the childlike and
the mature, is evident in how the design presents itself to
its neighbors: red concrete walls covered with a random smattering
of ornamental
reliefs. |
|
|
|
 |
|
Beyond the focus on the individual
client, architecture must always address its location. In this
case the house sits on the site of an old barn in
the center of the small town of Scharans (pop. 825). Planning
restrictions called for the rebuilding of the old barn's volume,
a requirement that gives the house the profile of what came
before but also gives Bardill area that he did not need. In
response, Olgiati created a courtyard from the majority of the
footprint, in effect creating an
oasis for the musician to retreat to. |
|
|
|
 |
|
The house's interior reinforces
the importance and focus of the courtyard, with a large sliding
glass wall off the main living area allowing for this
outdoor space to flow inside. This apparent flow is furthered
by the same red concrete and ornamental reliefs finding their
way into the living area.
What at first glance appears to be an inhospitable environment
-- monochromatic in character and free of windows -- is appropriate
for the musician who "dreamed of a place where he could
withdraw and work." |
| |
|
|
House for a Musician in Scharans, Switzerland
by Valerio Olgiati |
2008.02.11 |
|
| |
|
Click
on images below for larger views.
|
| |
|
|
|