Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography, Windows, FacadeUnder the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 3 of 63Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Table, Chair, BeamUnder the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Living RoomUnder the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - More Images+ 58

More SpecsLess Specs
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Martin Cenek

Text description provided by the architects. Libocká Street, which borders the historic Hvězda (Star) Game Reserve on the north side and slopes down from Petřiny to Libocká Pond and Litovický Creek, is not very welcoming at first glance. From the south side, it is defined by fragmented original terraced housing supplemented by the remains of grand suburban villas from the late 19th century. Its northern edge is formed in part of its length by a terrain break and a downward slope.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 9 of 63
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Martin Cenek

Just above the point where the street turns and slopes sharply towards the church of St. Fabian and Sebastian in Liboc, there is an interesting, large, and formerly almost impenetrably overgrown plot of land, with several atypical features. The height difference between the street and the base of the Star Nature Reserve wall that encloses it on the south side is as much as fourteen meters, as a near-vertical sandstone cliff between eight and ten meters high divides the land about halfway down.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 57 of 63
Ground Floor Plan
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 58 of 63
First Floor Plan

The position of the houses was based on a desire to appropriately complete the existing fabric and composition of buildings in an area that has a rural character, with houses winding along the street and following the terrain's contours. The proposed triplet of houses reflects the usual local forms in its shape, size, and roofs with the ridges oriented parallel to the street. The prominent presence of the exposed sandstone mass is a determining factor in the positioning of the buildings in relation to each other and about the overall urban design – as has been common in the formation of rural settlements throughout history. The individual houses are rotated in relation to each other and respond to the rock wall that backs them to the south. Through a gradual dialogue with clients and the authorities, the minimalist form of the houses has emerged.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Table, Chair, Beam
© Martin Cenek

The roofs of the two outermost houses were designed as hipped to soften the overall mass. A rock wall is visible through the widening partitions between the buildings. The forefront of the buildings towards the street has a more urban character (stone paving, newly planted trees), while the steeply sloping garden on the cliff above the houses is more wild and makes use of the original mature vegetation. It is bounded by the wall of the Star Game Reserve.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 3 of 63
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 29 of 63
© Martin Cenek

All three buildings are visually elevated one story above ground floor level; white archetypal abstracted masses thus visually float above the smaller footprint and materially differentiated ground floor. A combination of plain white lime plaster, natural timber, white perforated corrugated sheet metal, and glazing is used. These materials are further complemented on the exterior with galvanized steel details and grey-painted timber street fencing.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Exterior Photography, Brick, Windows
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 63 of 63
Section 3

The elevated position in the landscape, with one entire living floor in contact with the rock wall, and the range of views of Liboc and the Šárka rocks in the distance meant that windows were needed facing north, onto the busy narrow street to frame these views. The seemingly random composition of different types and sizes of windows in the street façade has this very reason – frameless glazing defines the view, often of the Liboc church, or the horizon dominated by the nature of Divoká Šárka. The garden façades of the houses are maximally open to the countryside with large frameless glazing.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Windows
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Windows
© Martin Cenek

All three structures have two regular residential floors and an attic. The bottom floor serves as the entrance for both houses, while the middle apartment building has common facilities and access to the central exterior staircase, which, together with the elevator, serves the entrance floors of the residential units - two duplexes and two penthouses. The investor's family villa is characterized by a different garden area, where the main house is accompanied by the volumes of an indoor pool and an outdoor kitchen with vegetated roofs defining a terrace between them.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Living Room
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 45 of 63
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Kitchen
© Martin Cenek

Essential elements of all the houses are their staircases. The client's house is a spiral monolithic reinforced concrete staircase connecting all floors and allowing a vertical view through the entire house. This in-situ staircase was conceived as a massive sculpture with significant presence, visible also from the street through the glazing of one of the two loggias on the facade. It is complemented by an extremely subtle handrail made of bent, welded, and lacquered white bar steel. A lightweight, white-painted steel staircase with a subtle welded zig-zagging structure runs through the smaller family house for a change. The middle apartment building is traversed by an exterior steel staircase with grating used for the treads; walking up it offers contact with the massive rock wall.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography
© Martin Cenek
Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 49 of 63
© Martin Cenek

The interiors of all the houses have been designed in a fundamentally similar way: surfaces of exposed concrete, white plaster, oak floors, and built-in furniture in a combination of white paint and natural oak veneer. The floors in the service areas are tiled with hexagonal mosaic in two shades of grey, and the walls of all bathroom spaces and the indoor swimming pool in the investor's house are finished with light grey screed. The aim was to create a calm and simple background for the life of the inhabitants of the houses and space for quality elements of free-standing furniture. The investor's villa is also for the collection of contemporary Czech art characterized by its distinctive color scheme.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Image 48 of 63
© Martin Cenek

The buildings were executed as a predominantly monolithic reinforced concrete structure with exposed bottom faces of the ceiling slabs, combined with steel columns. Heating is provided by air-to-water heat pumps and hot-water floor heating. All buildings are equipped with ventilation heat recovery and air conditioning. All three houses were built in passive standard as exceptionally energy-efficient.

Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture - Interior Photography, Beam, Windows
© Martin Cenek

Project gallery

See allShow less
About this office
Cite: "Under the Star Game Reserve / Martin Cenek Architecture" 29 May 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1017064/under-the-star-game-reserve-martin-cenek-architecture> ISSN 0719-8884

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.