Israel's Heavy Light House
Everything about this vacation home is little crazy. For starters, there’s the location. It’s in Israel. In northern Galilee. On the border with Lebanon.
Photo courtesy Z-A Studio.
“The clients made an idealistic decision to purchase the land after the most recent Lebanese/Israeli war,” says Guy Zucker, principal architect in New York’s Z-A Studio. “The area was devastated. It was bombed by Hezbollah from the southern part of Lebanon.”
Once hostilities ceased, the economy of the nearby village of Shomera was in shambles. To give it a jump-start, land was priced very reasonably, with the stipulation that buyers cover part of the village debt.
“The client said: ‘Okay, we’re going to build. We want to do it, and if it doesn’t work out, then it doesn’t work out—but we will have helped the village,’” says Zucker. Security regulations required concrete walls, 18 inches thick. The building had to be situated so that it faced away from the border. That opened it up to views of nearby forest and valley. The result is an angular, geometric essay that mediates the conflicting conditions of heavy war zone with lighter vacation home.
“The way we typically work, we look first not to the imagery but to the restraints, like the security,” Zucker says. “That sets the organization, the scheme. Once that’s in place, it inspires us.” He placed three rectangular blocks containing two bedrooms and a bath around a common area, to form a closed-in courtyard. The common space is perforated with a number of openings to contrast with the weightier blocks and provide lightness for the feel of a vacation home.
“I saw the blocks as rocks,” he says. “We connected them to the landscape like a Zen garden. Around the rocks are little pebbles, combed in a ripple effect. Then we took the interior floor pattern and organized the ceramic tile to ripple around the big blocks. It’s a gradient color of blue inside and out. And it forms a porch-like area between the house and the outside.”
In essence, Zucker has carved a surprisingly successful oasis of peace out of one of the most war-torn places on the planet.
To see more images of the project, please view the slideshow.
Don't miss a word of Dwell! Download our FREE app from iTunes, friend us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter!
Advertising
Advertising
Advertising
Related Products
-
Heavy Desk Light
by Benjamin HubertWhen deadlines loom and focused concentration…
-
Box Light
The Clapper is old news. These days, touch…
-
Bright 1
Pros: If you desire maximum…
Latest
-
05.23
The Making of Screenplay: Part 8
Jenny Wu, a partner at Oyler Wu Collaborative, documents the…
-
05.23
Veliero Shelving by Cassina
In 1940, architect Franco Albini made a single model of his…
-
05.23
ICFF 2012: Picks from Javits Center
This week we're digging deep into our favorites objets de…
Follow
Dwell
Reloading tweets…























courageous enterprise, congratulations! love the color combo outside but really doubt that it feels good inside with al that blue in it. sorry to say. bb
I am intrigued by the house. One slide refers to a temperature range of 50-100 F, yet there is no information on how the house addressed this range, especially that "it's pretty hot". Moreover, I would have enjoyed the slideshow much more than I did looking at a mechanical arm waving atop each photo. I hope Dwell will be more selective in placing ads in the future.
I was intrigued by this article because of the location...it is my dream to one day live in Israel. These pictures are awful. I wanted to see more of the inside of the house and a wide scale picture of the surrounding area. Come on Dwell!
I opine that the colours will work great in the (primarily) hot and sunny climate. The home should feel nice and cool. A 50 degree F temp difference is not that big (ours in eastern WA vary by 120 degrees F.. plus heavy snow loads.) But building in the political climate here would be the challenge. Would have liked to see more of the interior. Furnishings look intriguing...
RSS Feed
Add a Comment