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Click
on images for larger color views.
The aptly named Concrete Studio is tucked into a hillside
of the property of a creative couple who are also avid gardeners.
Design by Austin, Texas-based Mell
Lawrence Architects, the poured-in-place structure certainly
stands out with its exposed surface, scale-like texture and
faceted form. In the last it appears to be one monolithic
object carved to make way for openings and, one would guess,
some sort of interior. At first glance it's intriguing, to
say the least.
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In plan the studio resembles
a slightly irregular pentagon with one-and-a-half sides built
into the hillside. The studio space itself sits on the second
floor, above a garage. Where car
access is at one end, the couple's entry into the studio
is on the opposite, via a walkway
at the level of the garden and sliding doors into the studio.
In addition to these two openings are a large window facing
the house, a few small openings facing different directions,
a door from the garage, and a
balcony from the shower. In each case, regardless of size,
the opening follows the coursing of the concrete scales. |
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Also provided is a skylight,
created at a corner that appears to have been lopped off.
This triangular opening faces north, to bring in even light.
It sits directly opposite the large rectangular
window facing the house. The skylight does the most towards
giving the interior its distinctive character. Sure concrete
lines every concrete surface, dipping up and down at the roof
line, but when it meets the triangular
skylight something special is born. The two walls and
roof that frame the opening seem to be saying, "we want
light coming in here like this." It is not alien like
the rectangular openings. |
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Returning to an obvious point,
what makes this studio is the concrete. But instead of extruding
a regular footprint, Mell Lawrence Architects found a plan
that works within the larger site and shaped it as it rose.
Each horizontal band of scaled concrete -- creating distinctive
shadows at any time of the day -- seems to indicate a pour,
a place to stop and maybe reevaluate things. In this sense
it looks like the design evolved on site. This may not be
the case, but the final result comes close to becoming a natural
fit with the garden and other buildings on the couple's property.
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Concrete Studio in Austin,
Texas by Mell
Lawrence Architects |
2010.02.08 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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