|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Click
on images for larger views. [Google Earth link]
Corrugated steel and West Texas certainly aren't strangers,
but in the case of residential architecture they're not the
type of bedfellows that industrial buildings make. Texas Tech
University professor Urs
Peter Flueckiger's decision to build his 2,750sf house
in Lubbock out of the material -- painted bright red, no less
-- did not sit well with his neighbors, who see the material
as appropriate for barns and sheds, not houses.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Situated on a 50x150 (15x45m)
foot lot, the house is an elongated
"C" (or "U", depending on how you look
at the plan) with every room
opening to a courtyard, a traditional parti for the area.
This grassy space is bordered on the long side by a bamboo
pergola, which provides shade for the house's living areas
and bedrooms; the husband and wife studios occupy the short
sides at opposite ends of the open space. Inside the husband
created custom furniture
and the wife placed splashes of color
throughout that pick up on the trees outside. |
|
|
|
 |
|
The decision to use corrugated
steel and other inexpensive materials in the construction
of the house stemmed from budget concerns. Amazingly the house
was built for only $51/sf. Other material and design considerations
include concrete block for some walls, a similar corrugated
steel for the roof, standard sliding doors, bamboo mats for
the pergola, concrete floors, and clerestory windows instead
of skylights.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Ultimately the house is greater
than a sum of these parts. It is a restrained contemporary
dwelling that recalls traditional southwestern architecture,
while also expressing Flueckiger's
affinity for the art and architecture of Donald Judd.
While the influence of the artist is not apparent in the aesthetics
of the house and its design, the simplicity of the plan and
the pared down materials are surely aligned with Judd's boxes
and other objects in Marfa. As well, each see the industrial
context as something to embrace, not to dismiss in favor of
something unnecessary, be it ornamental or economical. |
| |
|
|
House on 21st Street in Lubbock, Texas
by Urs Peter Flueckiger |
2008.03.31 |
|
| |
|
Click
on images below for larger views.
|
| |
|
|
|