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The following text and images
are courtesy Jef Smith for the design of a house by Vicky Thornton with MELD architecture
in the Tarn-et-Garonne region of south western France. Click on images for larger color views.
Built on a steeply sloping greenfield site, the house is
expressed in two distinct parts: a rubble limestone base containing a bedroom, pottery studio, shower
and utility rooms below the main living and bedroom spaces in a chestnut clad timber
frame. The inflecting timber forms of the upper level are intended to respond to the approach, landscape and
surrounding views [floor plans]. At one end, the high roof of the front porch is angled to look along the access road, the
main living area offers expansive views of the surrounding landscape, and the terrace reveals views
of the valley.
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Vernacular materials and elements create a pragmatic aesthetic particular to place. The rubble stone
walls are typical of this part of France as are timber shuttered windows and sliding, galvanized steel
doors on local farm buildings. Here the timber shutters close flush with the walls to continue the board-on-board
rhythm of the chestnut cladding, giving strong vertical shadow lines which compliment the
heavy modelling of the rubble stone. |
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Internally the walls and ceiling to the upper level are lined in OSB, painted in the bedrooms to
distinguish the more private spaces but left "fair faced" on the remaining walls to give a warm texture
to the interior of the house. Joinery elements, like the kitchen cabinet doors and long shelving wall are
expressed in phenolic ply, chosen for its robustness as well as to offset the OSB. At the lower level
the ceilings and internal face of the external walls are faced in lime render with timber-lined window
seats created in the deep reveals. |
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Essentially robust and low tech, the house is highly insulated and utilizes the potential for passive
solar heating in the winter, while the high thermal mass of the lower floor and large volume of the
timber frame (with sun-shading shutters to south facing windows) enables a comfortable temperature
to be maintained in the summer without the need for air conditioning or mechanical ventilation. The
house incorporates solar thermal panels for domestic hot water, rainwater harvesting for flushing
toilets and irrigation, a green roof, and uses locally sourced materials and labor. |
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Petit Bayle in Tarn-et-Garonne, France by Vicki Thornton with MELD architecture |
2008.12.29 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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