A Towering Tree Grows at the Heart of This Super Skinny Hanoi Home

ODDO Architects creates a spacious and airy home that’s just under 14 feet wide.

Published by

ODDO Architects describe Hanoi as a city dense with people, traffic, and air pollution. They say it lacks parks and public spaces, but it’s strong in Vietnamese culture and tradition. In 2019, they designed the CH House for a family of six spanning three generations, drawing on tradition to create a tranquil refuge in the middle of the bustling city.

Tasked with creating a new home in the middle of Hanoi, Vietnam, ODDO Architects sought to incorporate essentials—like plenty of natural light and ventilation.

Hoang Le

A window breaks up the street-facing facade composed of perforated cement blocks.

Hoang Le

Get the Pro Newsletter

What’s new in the design world? Stay up to date with our essential dispatches for design professionals.

Subscribe

The project started with "a typical plot for long and narrow local tube houses," says the firm. The site allotted them enough space for a home measuring just under 14 feet wide and 114 feet deep. In order to admit enough light and air flow into such a long and narrow footprint, the firm drew inspiration from traditional Hanoi houses with interior courtyards. 

From inside, a view of the steel-and-glass framework behind the cement blocks, which ensures light flows through the narrow home. Glass panels open to increase airflow, and an integrated planter fosters foliage.

Hoang Le

To create that same courtyard effect across the elongated, five-level plan, the firm formed empty voids by stepping the various floor plates. The volumes are capped with sections of clear roofing (notably where stairs are located) that allows light to cascade deep into the center of the home. "This design makes the space properly open, and provides an unexpected spacious feeling, despite the limited width of the house," says the firm.

On the exterior, a perforated cement block screen overlays an internal framework of steel and glass. Opening the glass panels allows air to flow throughout the entire house. Exterior terraces (one is located at the rooftop) offer even more access to the outdoors.

Inside, integrated planters are interspersed at every level of the home. Filled with trees, trailing vines, and clusters of tropical houseplants, the planters offer a lush green contrast to the spare material palette, and the plants cast a tranquil effect. 

At just under 14 feet wide, the CH House could have felt cramped. But the architects created empty volumes within the plan to make it feel more spacious and airy. Standing in the double-height library, where there’s enough vertical space for a tree to grow, one can see down into the shared living areas and up into a kid’s bedroom at the fifth floor.

Hoang Le

Staggered floor and ceiling heights maintain sight lines into the different rooms in the home.

Hoang Le

Natural light cascades over the stairwells to reach the tree growing in the dining room.

Hoang Le

Shop The Look

Sossego Amsterdam Table

With a nod to the Dutch capital, the Amsterdam table offers clean lines with geometric angles cut into its base and legs. The Netherlands city steeped in rich architectural history is famous for the luxurious gabled brick buildings lining her crisscrossing canals. Dating from 1306, through the Dutch Golden Age, and into the 21st century, the capital city of Amsterdam is a living gallery of modern mixed with Renaissance and the baroque. Italian, Roman, Dutch functionalist, traditionalist, it’s all there.

Shop

Maxim Lighting Dianne Mini Pendant

A familiar theme with a fresh feel. The Dianne Mini Pendant by Maxim Lighting has a way of fitting in with contemporary or traditional décor. Its pear-shaped shade of clear glass suffuses brightness and is perfect for showcasing a vintage-inspired lightbulb (not included). Perfect for adding simple elegance, ambience and task lighting to kitchens, dining rooms and living spaces, this is a dimmable ceiling fixture that can be adapted to hang at the desired height. Maxim Lighting, headquartered in California, offers high-quality lighting fixtures in a variety of designs, finishes, and glass styles that complement contemporary and transitional interiors. Photo Courtesy of Lumens

Shop

Carl Hansen & Søn Wishbone Chair

Using the best natural materials and refined steam-bent methods, Wishbone is made to last for generations. In 1944, Hans Wegner began a series of chairs that were inspired by portraits of Danish merchants sitting in Ming Chairs. One of these chairs was the Wishbone Chair (1949), also known as the “Y” or “CH-24,” which has been produced by the Danish firm Carl Hansen & Søn since 1950. The son of a shoemaker, Wegner was trained as a cabinetmaker before attending the School of Arts and Crafts in Copenhagen, after which he began his career as an architect. Just three years later, Wegner started his own design office, and his work soon caught the eye of Carl Hansen. The Wishbone Chair fit what the Hansen company was looking for to supplement the heavier forms popular at the time. Made in Denmark.

Shop

"Nature is an important element that provides a positive effect on people’s mental health," notes the firm. "However, the rapid development of large cities has resulted in a lack of green spaces for people to relax. That is why planting trees and plants inside the house is necessary—and it helps create a peaceful living space to release stress."

The constrained material palette—from the cast concrete stairs and minimal metal railing, to the simple wood accents—further instills a sense of tranquility.

The double-height volume over the kitchen and living room creates an airy feel. An elevator provides an alternate way to ascend to the upper levels.

Hoang Le

At the first floor, a water garden sits in an integrated basin. Folded metal stairs climb above the water’s surface.

Hoang Le

An exterior terrace lies just off the main living spaces on the third floor. It can be seen through the window at the stairs.

Hoang Le

The five-level floor plan is divided into two zones, with a commercial business occupying the lower two levels. The staggered floor and ceiling heights create intimacy in the private quarters and a sense of openness in the main living spaces.

"The common spaces of the family area (such as the living room, library, dining room, and kitchen) are positioned at different levels with varying ceiling heights in order to compose an open, continuous space that facilitates ease of communication among the family members," explains the firm.

The stepped wooden platforms provide built-in seats for the library. Down the stairs to the left is a guest room.

Hoang Le

After all, the firm’s ultimate goal was to create an urban refuge where the family could slow down, rest, and more easily connect with one another. "In the world of modern technology, with smart phones and televisions, family ties are weakened," says the firm. "The space design emphasizes connections among the family members, especially in the context of today’s hurried lifestyle."

Dappled shadows are cast by the exterior concrete screen and the cantilevered tread at the stairs.

Hoang Le

The fifth-floor kid’s bedroom is made to feel more cozy with wood flooring and folding wooden screens, the latter of which facilitate privacy or connection to the main spaces.

Hoang Le

Stairs lead from the kid’s room to a washroom, and trailing vines spill into the void.

Hoang Le

The rooftop terrace has an incredible view of the surrounding city.

Hoang Le

CH House first- and second-level floor plans

Courtesy of ODDO Architects

CH House third- and fourth-level floor plans.

Courtesy of ODDO Architects

CH House fifth-level and roof floor plans.

Courtesy of ODDO Architects

Related Reading:

Indoor Gardens Bring Light and Air Into This Brick Home in Vietnam

A Vietnamese Abode Draws In Light With a Glass Atrium

Project Credits:

Architect of Record: ODDO Architects

Construction: B-Up Construction

Structural Engineer: Ngo Anh Tuan

Civil Engineer: ODDO Architects

Landscape Design: ODDO Architects

Interior Design: ODDO Architects

Published

Last Updated

LikeComment

Home Tours