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Click
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In the town of Aversa, a little north of Naples, is the aptly
named Casa Doppia (Double House), aptly named as the house
is not one but two houses, not-quite mirrored doubles of each
other. Designed by local architects Iodice
Architetti, the design and execution of the residence
is such that one would warrant it attention, so the twin nature
of the project makes one's way of looking at the design shift
to take into account the circumstances.
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The most obvious shift in thinking
about the design is by looking at the floor
plans. One notices that the plans are similar to each
other, but not the same. They are not even mirrored opposites.
Instead they are subtle manipulations of what are basically
the same programs in roughly similar envelopes. For example,
the ground floor of one locates the shared kitchen/dining/living
wing perpendicular to the shared wall, while the other locates
the same along that wall. The difference is subtle, the former
with glazing on opposite sides and an intimate proximity to
the pool and the latter with
more solid walls and locating these spaces a bit more removed
from the pool. |
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These sorts of subtle differences
-- subtle in plan, but most likely more impressionable to
the respective residents and visitors able to experience both
sides -- are naturally due to site conditions. A look at the
plan again indicates that the approach via automobile is on
the long side for one and on the short side for the other.
In addition to the hinge of the shared wall about which the
two plans set up their layouts, the carports -- called out
by their distinctive "lunar" openings overhead --
dictate much on the ground floor. The first floor plans, on
the other hand, are basically identical, one a 180-degree
rotation of the other.
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This rotation takes place about
a skylight at the center of the shared wall between the two
houses. The stairs located
below the skylight, coupled with small openings that give
glimpses between the two, make the vertical ascent and descent
the tie that binds each house, if you will. The articulation
of the structure (image at left) and the shared wall are two
of the most dramatic aspects of the design, something that
might have been successful as a single residence but wouldn't
have carried the meaning and richness of the Double House. |
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Casa Doppia in Aversa, Italy
by Iodice Architetti |
2008.07.14 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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