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Villa Old Oaks, Building, Architect, Photos, Home, Design
Villa Old Oaks Architecture - Key Building
Slovenian house : Ofis Arhitekti
Villa Old Oaks, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Ofis Arhitekti

Photos: Tomaz Gregoric
The private client convoked a proper architectural competition for
five invited offices, the idea being to choose an architect for his
new residence.
The residence is situated in a new neighbourhood of six larger villas.
The unique feature of the site is a splendid view of a stand of oak
trees that are over a hundred years old. The terrain slopes down towards
these trees. To guarantee that most of the major spaces will have
access to this view, the house is organised in stepped levels following
the terrain. The outline of the house keeps to the shape of the plot
of land, minus four metres all around, the minimum distance Slovenian
law calls for vis-à-vis ones neighbours.
The heart of the house is an external covered courtyard. Main spaces
such as the entrance lobby and staircase, the childrens playroom,
the dining, living, bedroom and work areas overlook this space. These
rooms, plus the wellness area with its small pool, also have a view
of the park.
The staircase roof is glazed. The courtyard roof is part-glass, part-wood
and has views of the sky and the treetops, thus creating a strong
link between inside and outside.

Structurally, we wanted to achieve a column-less ground floor. The
ceiling of the dining and living area is slung from a Vierendeel beam
hidden in the walls of the floors above. The glass construction and
frames are also handled with minimum supports.
Other programmes inside the house follow the clients brief,
which was very precise. His is an interesting lifestyle, what with
working partly at home and having different hobbies. Security and
fire escape issues are important, as is the clear division of private
areas of the house and those where guests are allowed to wear shoes
or where one receives the postman.
The house has also to be intelligent. Various functions
such as air conditioning, security and sun-responsive external shade
can be controlled by software, and different ambiences can be created
using lights and music.

Sustainable issues
The house is a private residence positioned in the neighbourhood of
6 larger villas. The quality of the site is a beautiful view to the
existing common park with oaks over 100 years old. Therefore the aim
of the building was to open view from all main spaces of the house
towards these trees.
The building is constructed in half-floors. In the heart of the building
there is a stepped courtyard, where all the main spaces open.
The building was to provide ideal daylight conditions combined with
efficient indoor and outdoor climate concept. In Slovenia there are
extreme climate conditions; with hot summer, when temperatures rise
up to 35C and cold winter when they drop below 10C or more.
In addition there is rain in spring and autumn.
The client required an environmentally sustainable concept that would
conserve energy and natural resources. Also he required an external
space, that would be usable both, in sunny and in rainy days.
The spaces of the house are therefore organised around external atrium.
The combination of the atrium, the roof of the atrium and the house
and existing trees around the house create a sustainable concept such
as:
The half transparent and half non transparent ventilated
membrane roof of the external atrium creates and airy rain-proof external
space.
In combination with dense greenery of surrounding trees atrium is
cool in summer and provides rain protection. One can enjoy outdoor
intimacy, since atrium is protected also against views of the neighbours
both, in sunny and in rainy days.
In winter, when trees are leaf-less sun penetrates through transparent
roof and atrium accumulates the energy and passes it inside the house.
The sun also penetrates through glazed roof of the interior.
In addition the facades are combined with pivoting wooden louvers
that provide protection against insulation and control ingress of
day-light. On hot days the louver elements are computer operated to
follow the course of the sun. It is also possible to darken the working
rooms and bedrooms completely.
The concept of atrium, semi-glazed roof and louvers allows major savings
to be made in the amount of eletrical energy needed for lightning,
cooling and heating. In addition, direct insolation via the facades
and roof results in a high passive thermal yield during the heating
period. In summer in contrast effective sunshading helps to minimize
cooling energy needs.

Villa Old Oaks : Ofis Arhitekti
Location: Ljubljana, Slovenia
Design team: Rok Oman, pela Videcnik,
Nea Oman, Florian Frey, Vanja Fink, pela Uric
Design year: 2003
Construction: 2003-08
Structural engineering: Valide d. o. o
Mechanical engineering: Oves d. o. o., Vavtar Engineering d. o. o.
Electrical engineering: Winky d. o. o, Energomont d. o. o.
Surface area: 800 m2
Cost: 1M € aprox
Photographs: Toma Gregoric
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World Architecture : e-architect
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Buildings / photos for the Villa Old Oaks Architecture page welcome:
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Villa Old Oaks : page - adrian welch / isabelle
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