Project posted by Maarten Statius Muller

Residence BPB

Year
2019
Structure
House (Single Residence)
Style
Modern
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium
Residence BPB Brasschaat Belgium

3 more photos

Details

Square Feet
2056
Bedrooms
2

Credits

Architect
David Bulckaen
Interior Design
David Bulckaen
Builder
HUYBRECKX/NOBHILL
Photographer
Koen Van Damme

From Maarten Statius Muller

Residence BPB - renovation and extension of an existing house

‘One summer evening, the idea took shape when it turned out that both client and architect were big fans of the residence featured in the movie “A single Man”, a house built in California by Lautner. That shared love brought about instant chemistry. The architect based his design on the principle of the viewfinder of a camera, a reference to the professional activity of one of the residents.
In each room there is only one window to look out, as if you were looking through the lens of your camera. Having only one view towards the outside world gives peace of mind. "

"Specifically, the old bungalow was gutted, insulated and redecorated. In addition, there was an extension that includes the summer living. The summer living, with windows on all sides, provides a counterweight to the rigid way of looking in the other rooms.’


1960s bungalow cuts cinematic dash in Belgium

House BPB, created by Belgian architect David Bulckaen, turns a 1960s bungalow into a dark, mysterious, contemporary house inspired by the film A Single Man

Set within the leafy countryside outside Antwerp, House BPB, designed by the Belgian architecture practice of David Bulckaen, cuts a dark, minimalist figure against the soft foliage. The project, a family house, was inspired by the Tom Ford movie A Single Man, explains the architect. Bringing together a clean and low, rectangular volume with a moody, somewhat mysterious cladding of dark insulation panels, the project is a clever 1960s bungalow renovation and extension.

‘One summer evening, the idea took shape when it turned out that both the client and myself were big fans of the residence featured in the movie – the house built in California by John Lautner. That shared love brought about instant chemistry. I based the design on the principle of the viewfinder of a camera, a reference to the professional activity of one of the residents.’
Creating the right views and framing the landscape through strategic openings were key in crafting this careful, cinematic experience. ‘[It is] as if you were looking through the lens of your camera,’ says Bulckaen. The structure’s spaces alternate views through rooms and glimpses of courtyards and the woods surrounding the house, consistently reminding the residents of their leafy location.

This suited the owners perfectly. ‘The owners are very outdoor-minded, and love to throw open windows and doors whenever the weather allows it,’ the architect says. ‘The old house, however, was very closed and introverted, had very few windows, and there was almost no connection to the garden and wider outdoors.’

The ‘summer room’, a living space sitting in the structure’s new addition, becomes a centrepiece for the project. This room provides 180-degree views of the garden and when the windows open and the weather allows, it becomes one with the green landscape. The dark external cladding both insulates and unifies visually old and new, while pleasantly contrasting with the light concrete and white plaster interiors….