If Ever a Home Framed Views, It’s This Boxy Seaside Retreat in Greece
Design firm Neiheiser Argyros stripped a grid-like ’70s home to its essence in service of the Mediterranean setting.
Design firm Neiheiser Argyros stripped a grid-like ’70s home to its essence in service of the Mediterranean setting.
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Project Details:
Location: Evoia, Greece
Architect: Neiheiser Argyros / @neiheiser_argyros
Footprint: 2,690 square feet
Year: 2022
Structural Engineer: Michalis Michelatos
Landscape Design: Greenplus
Main Contractor: Stefanos Vasdekis
Main Sub-Contrator: Ergodomein Kastriotis
Steelworks: Christos Karkalis
Photographer: Lorenzo Zandri / @lorenzozandri
From the Architect: "The grid house is about repetition and difference. A simple and regular concrete structural grid creates a variety of interior and exterior spaces with views across the Eubean Sea. The project is a full gut renovation of an existing modernist house into a six-bedroom tucked into the landscape, appearing modest from the entry but opening up its full width and height to the sea. At times the grid is infilled with brick to create enclosure and privacy. At other moments it contains full height wood-framed windows to orient views out into the garden and sea. In other locations the grid is left open, and creates exterior covered patios, balconies, and pergolas. The landscape is designed to wrap around the house and cascade in terraces down toward the sea.
"Whereas the original house—designed by Greek architect Nikos Hadjimichalis in the 1970s—masked its underlying structural grid, the renovation reveals and celebrates this grid, emphasizing the variations in spaces and views possible on the site. A new pergola with a built-in seating area extends the original concrete structural grid into the landscape, conflating interior and exterior and blurring the edges of the existing rectangular massing. On the inside, a new staircase connects what used to be two separate independent houses, allowing for the private and public spaces of the house to be reorganized respectively into bedrooms on the lower floor and an open plan kitchen, living, and dining room on the upper floor.
"The house sits next to another 1970s house designed by the same architect, and also recently renovated by Neiheiser Argyros. As such, the two houses share similar logics and can be thought of as siblings, both in their original DNA— exposed concrete and brick—but also in the way they’ve been redesigned. Many of the original modernist details have been recreated and updated, but also complemented with playful new additions such as a pink metal stair balustrade, custom built-in furniture, distinctive wood millwork, and galvanized metal grating."
See the full story on Dwell.com: If Ever a Home Framed Views, It’s This Boxy Seaside Retreat in Greece
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