A multi generational house in Bizau.
The 1950’s refurbishments made to an 18th century farm house required extensive attention. As a solution the house, including the barn, is removed and replaced by a new building with the same silhouette. The attached stable is preserved. In spite of the new building adjoining the old stable, the two buildings have become one.
The farmhouse was reconfigured and rebuilt to become a multi-family house with three floors for the parents and the two grown children, meeting the needs of the Moosbrugger family. The apartments are now facing the sun with large, generous glazing. The workshop is located in the basement. The staircase is illuminated from two sides and it opens up all the floors.
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Constructively it is freely developed skeleton construction. Steel supports, steel girders and outer walls made of prefabricated, highly insulated timber frame elements with the board stack ceilings, form the supporting structure. The interior walls are designed as lightweight timber structures. The facade is vertically clad, the application of the cladding alternates around the windows and parapets. The porches on the south side are integrated into the appearance.
In the implementation, a high importance was placed on regional value creation. The spruce and fir timber needed for the construction comes mainly from the regions forests, and the majority of the craftsmen involved in the construction come from the immediate neighbourhood.