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A-House, Dublin Building, Project, Photo, News, Design, Property, Ireland,
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A-House Dublin : Architecture Information + Images
Residential Development in Dublin, Ireland
A-House
FKL architects
17 Jun 2009
Photos : Verena Hilgenfeld
A-House is a single-family house located on a mews lane in a Victorian
suburb of Dublin city. The house is an exploration of diagonal space
within an orthogonal form and the possibilities of integrating environmental
concerns at a fundamental level.

The site was chosen for its proximity to schools, local shops, recycling
facilities and work, allowing a daily life independent of the car
or public transport. The house itself is large enough to support a
family over a lifetime. Located in the former back garden of a three
storey Victorian terraced house, the house is accessed from a lane
to the south with the garden to the north.
A concrete tube provides the structural and spatial organisation and
encloses the public areas of the house. Divided by joinery elements,
the tube of space is twisted between ground and first floor to allow
a relationship to the garden and daylight from above. This diagonal
spatial relationship between the two floors allows a simultaneous
experience of all dimensions of the house - length, breadth, height
and extending into the surroundings in unexpected diagonal glimpses.
Concerns of establishing a relationship with the garden and maximising
daylight penetration to the North facing garden facade when East &
West facades are blank, dictated the organisation of family rooms
at ground and first floor connected by a narrow void. A strong visual
and spatial connection is established between the kitchen/dining room
at ground level and the study on the first floor, capitalising on
natural lighting and glimpsed views. Arranged around the conceptual
tube, are the less public rooms: garage, utility room and WC at ground
level and children's bedrooms and bathroom at first floor.

The layout allows for an independent or guest bedroom suite at ground
level and gives flexibility to accommodate change in family circumstances.
The modest garden will provide space to grow vegetables and fruit
while the roofs are covered in sedum to provide surface water attenuation
and replaces the building's 'green footprint'.
In common with its neighbours, the exterior is restrained, choosing
a formal expression of the relationships between internal spaces and
elevation. Drawing on the Georgian tradition, windows are floor-to-ceiling
allowing daylight to penetrate deep into the plan.
Set within a tight urban context of protected structures, the relationship
with external spaces is not founded on an expectation of privacy externally
but on diagonal relationships that extend the perspective to distant
views and provided a backdrop to the internal activity.
A-House has been designed to achieve an 'A' Building Energy Rating,
with a particular emphasis on the use of passive systems. The concrete
exposed internally contains GGBS Portland replacement cement, a low
carbon product, and is sandblasted to accentuate the liquid nature
of the material and to record the process of construction.

The front and rear elevations are vented rain screen facades clad
with a wood based cladding panel, chosen for it's environmental credentials,
and these facades are supported on independent laminated timber framing
- from sustainable managed sources.
A-House Dublin images / information from FKL architects 170609
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FKL architects - Biography
FKL was established in Dublin, Ireland, in 1998 by Michelle Fagan, Paul
Kelly and Gary Lysaght.
RIAI Awards 2009 : Shortlist
Dublin Architect Studios
Dublin Architecture - Selection
Adamstown Central
Metropolitan Workshop

Henrietta Street Dublin
Ryan W. Kennihan Architects


World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the A-House Dublin Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
A-House Building : page - adrian welch / isabelle
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