Brooklyn studio AlexAllen has entirely revamped a family home in New York State, trading its outdated plywood siding for a modern finish composed of cement panels and blackened timber.
为了应对新帕尔茨的城市更新,建筑师翻新了这座距离纽约80英里(100公里)的20世纪70年代住宅。
“这栋独立的家庭住宅没有设立隔热保温层,同时在外部翻新、屋顶和机械系统上都亟待完善,”建筑师说。
For the New Paltz Renovation, the architects renovated an existing property that was built in the 1970s and is roughly 80 miles (100 kilometres) north of New York City.
"The single-family residence was built without insulation and in desperate need of an exterior renovation, a new roof and a mechanical systems overhaul," said the architects.
他们去除了住宅原有的外部饰面,但内部保持不变。在重建的外部饰面层上,建筑师还添加了隔热层和防潮层。
They stripped down the home's siding, while maintaining the interiors untouched. In rebuilding the exterior cladding, insulation was added to the walls, as well as a modern rain-screen finish.
Two complementary materials make up the updated palette. Blackened timber highlights the home's double-height main living space, while fibre cement boards clad the remainder of the house.
The wood siding was made using a technique known as shou sugi ban. "This ancient Japanese technique of preserving wood by charring its surface is highly resistant to the elements, attractively weathers over time and requires almost no maintenance," according to AlexAllen Studio.
耐用性和易于维修是选择这两种材料的关键。“业主要求使用在未来只需简单维护的材料,”建筑师解释道。
Durability and easy upkeep were key concerns in the choice of both materials. "The client requested to use materials that would require little to no future maintenance," the architects explained.
The home is composed of two volumes connected by a central passageway. To the east, a single-storey mass contains the garage, while the living spaces occupy two storeys on the western portion of the property.
Visitors enter between the home's two main volumes, into a compact lobby. The ground floor encompasses the dining room and kitchen to the north, and a small study in the southern extremity. A large double-height living room is located between the two.
Upstairs, a central landing spans above the living room and connects the four upstairs bedrooms. Three of them are clustered together on the north end of the property, across from the master bedroom, located to the south.
Blackened timber is a popular material for external cladding in the area. Other projects in New York that have employed the technique range from a micro library and refuge in the forest to the extension and renovation of a Brooklyn townhouse.
Photography is by Alan Tansey.