The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct

The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 2 of 45The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Windows, Facade, GlassThe Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Exterior Photography, Brick, FacadeThe Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 5 of 45The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - More Images+ 40

Kuhsar, Iran
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  540
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2024
  • Photographs
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Dimeh, kasra, shayco, tscoglass
  • Lead Architects: Solmaz Tatari, Ehsan Tavassoli
  • Design Team: Nila Shahmohammadi, Farid Rajabi
  • Detail Design Team: Masoumeh Shasti
  • Executive Managers: Bahman Zaree, Soheil Sabili
  • Graphics: Neda Jahantab
  • Clients: Eng.Hosseini, Dr.Mehdinejad
  • Mechanical Engineering: Mehdi Mehravaran
  • Civil Engineering: Farhad Bahrami
  • Construction Company: AsNow Design and Construct
  • City: Kuhsar
  • Country: Iran
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The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 5 of 45
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei

Text description provided by the architects. The proliferation of villas on Tehran's outskirts reflects more than a desire to escape the city's clamor and density. These homes embody a spirited pursuit of leisure and conviviality. The dynamic interplay of indoor and outdoor spaces, coupled with a playful exploration of different design eras, creates an atmosphere of intrigue and vitality. These villas are stages for the celebration of life, where residents and guests alike can wander, discover, and immerse themselves in a world of endless fascination. Spaces that offer a heightened incentive to stimulate the taste and curiosity of their subjects, where the unexpected leaves a special sensory quality in the mind of the viewer. The play of solid and void volumes, diverse paths, and stairways, not only strengthens the permeability of spaces but also offers a potential opportunity for viewers to climb over the building and become one with the fluidity of the spaces as their memories evolve.

The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 2 of 45
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 29 of 45
Diagram 01
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Exterior Photography, Brick, Facade
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei

The Voids, with such inclinations to combine void spaces within a relatively ordered and static box, began to grow. The villa, due to its openness on two fronts (north and west, facing desirable views and devoid of neighbors) and its closure on the other two sides (due to the site of potential eastern and southern neighbors), chose a combined extroverted-introverted typology; an extroverted building that embraces a variety of internal courtyards and intermediate spaces. The maximum northern courtyard, which maintains the greatest distance from the building, showcases a relatively transparent and extroverted building upon entry, while the minimal southern courtyard with its various light shafts creates small interior spaces."

The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Interior Photography, Facade
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 32 of 45
Plan - Ground Floor
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Windows, Facade, Glass
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei

The semi-central courtyard, nestled within the heart of the project, engages with both covered and open voids on all three floors, maintaining a degree of continuity. Like a sturdy trunk, it gathers spaces around itself and conducts light into the depths of the basement. In this deepest interior courtyard, a relatively old and valuable tree has been planted, serving as a marker of the passage of time for the residents. As it grows taller, it will have an increasingly prominent presence in the interior spaces. Simultaneously with the experience of approaching the building and observing it from its open facades, the project's placement on the site endeavors to maximally suspend the volume from its context. The minimal visual connection of the building with the northern courtyard, through the use of a long, latticed stair and seating area, provides a different sensory quality to the experience of sitting and watching the playground.

The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 18 of 45
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 36 of 45
Section BB
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Interior Photography, Brick, Facade, Windows
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei

Additionally, it creates a cozy and unique space in the northern underground passage. In this way, the building visually and implicitly seeks to preserve its cubic nature and enhance its sculptural quality. Although the program of the floors follows the conventional division into leisure (basement), living (ground floor), and nighttime habitation (first floor), the continuous connection of void spaces with diverse access possibilities, which do not necessarily penetrate the interior spaces, implicitly allows for wandering and maximum use of the capacity of enclosed void spaces at different levels (vertical and horizontal accesses within the building and site allow for continuous presence and exploration in most outdoor spaces). In addition, the presence of voids organizes the rooms as islands and, in the role of an effective character, their brick color and material become active in the background sequence to enliven the interior space.

The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 21 of 45
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Interior Photography
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei
The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Image 30 of 45
Diagram 02

Therefore, the solid spaces are marked with a lighter white color, and the void spaces have a heavier concentration of brick, forming a duality of light-filled and heavy-void spaces. In this way, the presence of various terraces and courtyards, alongside public and private spaces, seeks to respond to the natural human need to benefit from nature, whose air outside the bustling city of Tehran shows a more welcoming face to its residents.

The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct - Interior Photography, Windows, Wood, Facade
© Mohammad Hossein Hamzelouei

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Cite: "The Voids Villa / AsNow Design & Construct" 28 Oct 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1022881/the-voids-villa-asnow-design-and-construct> ISSN 0719-8884

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