Friday, April 27, 2012

Villa muller Assignment 2 material


Material - Texture

Material-Wall Paper

Material-Color

The composition of the room is outstanding evidence of Loos' original concept for the creation of space, known as "Raumplan".Various types of seating concentrate around the circular table in the center. The two armchairs of similar shape and unusual appearance are striking in the contrasting colors of their velvet covers: one, intended for the master of the house, is olive green and somewhat larger, while the second, for the lady, is pink.

The corridor is arresting with its unusual polychrome harmony, green-tinted opaque tiles and the deep terracotta colour of the floor and the frieze below the ceiling. The red radiator is deliberately set in a conspicuous location. Loos felt that technical elements should be not only part of the functional fittings of the house, but also deserved to contribute to the overall aesthetic appearance of the interiors.

The dining room has two open walls, to the living room and onto the stairs leading upstairs. The latter could be closed by hangings. Along one of the solid walls two cubes flank fitted furnishings include a folding syenite sideboard, above which Loos installed a group of oil paintings by the important Czech Symbolist, Jan Preisler.

The travertine cladding of the entrance with bench and paving into the garden. The original travertine elements were made using Bešeňov travertine, from a mine that is now closed. The most similar material for completing the travertine paving was found to be the ‘Travertino Türko’ from Carrara in Italy.

The dining room has two open walls, to the living room and onto the stairs leading upstairs. The latter could be closed by hangings. Along one of the solid walls two cubes flank fitted furnishings include a folding syenite sideboard, above which Loos installed a group of oil paintings by the important Czech Symbolist, Jan Preisler.

The children's rooms have yellow and blue painted softwood furniture. The red radiators are again an irreplaceable coloured component. The playroom also contained a coloured blackboard.

There is an interesting play of contrasting colors: the floor tiles are the earthy color of terracotta, while the wooden paneling of the walls, with the repeated square motif known from others of Loos' interiors, is painted white. The colors of the space are rounded off by the surprisingly deep blue ceiling, the color of an early evening Venetian sky. The hall includes a cloakroom with pegs and a mirror, set into a broad niche with Japanese hangings.

The facades made by plaster, simple and clean. Create a big difference with the interior. And create a different feeling for people who look from the outside and people who visit inside.

The bedroom has furniture made from American pear wood. Above each bed is a standard lamp with a textile shade. The bedroom walls are covered with their original, restored tapestries with maritime motifs, brought from France.

The interior of this dining room in a Japanising style betrays the marks of coffee. It is of a type very popular at the time - a dining room with fitted buffet, above which was a mirror. The furniture was made to measure, painted green with black detailing. The couch at the end of the room, again set between two cubes, is upholstered using an unusual material - horsehair, which was cooling in the hot summer.




Conclusion
"External walls are invariably load-bearing and of brick, with brick, loadbearing partition walls or a single column, accommondating the flue. The supporting construction is a necessity which does not play an architectonic role in Loo's work. In that sense a greater difference between him and the functionalist architects is barely conceivable, so-calledconstructional honesty” meant nothing to him.

The inside surfaces always differ from one room to the next, the choice of material, determining a room’s mood or character, was important to Loos.  Material was chosen mainly for its affective value. Natural stone and hardwood were treated so as to show of the natural qualities of the material to their best advantage, but simpler material was also used, and softwood was painted. Traditional patterns such as dado paneling, parquet and beamed ceilings were adhered to. Both the choice of distinctively marked materials and their plastic treatment tend to play down their object-like character and create a suggestion of spaciousness.”

He thinks the important thing for real space is the wall, floor, and ceiling, but not the structure wall. So, he uses the material to become a transition between the space and structure. He right a journal ‘Ornament is crime’ which against lavish ornament.  But different with the pure white wall, what loos against is the complicated handmade decoration. He loves the material which has the natural beauty, like the color and the pattern. In villa muller, material also plays a important role that distinguish public and private space. In the public space, the color of the material.

Villa muller Assignment two circulation


Plan shows staircase.



Two lines shows two kind of circulation in the house.

This circulation is most interesting part if this house, this is where the rumplan showed in the staircase. Boudoir is the heart of this part of staircase.

Three color shows different part of circulation.

Muller Villa Assignment 2 Public and Private


From the relationship with the surrounding environment, We can see that there is an angle between street and the house inorder to keep the house away from the noise and keep it private.





From the interio, public space mostly in the second and third floor, the privat space is in the upper level.  So, the private space become more personally.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Adolf Loos Villa Muller - Picture







Adolf Loos Villa Muller - Models










From the outside the Villa Muller, its just a wite cube, simple and without decoration. Once you open the model, you will see how complex the internal is. We make the model moveable, inorder to can see more clearly about the structure.  We can see a very strong compare between outside and inside. Loos trying to create a different feeling for the people from street, and people from inside. He want give simple feeling for people to look from outside, and make people from inside feel comfortable and warm.

Adolf Loos Villa Muller - Drawings

Adolf Loos  Villa Muller

“My architecture is not conceived in plans, but in spaces (cubes). I do not design floor plans, facades, sections. I design spaces. For me, there is no ground floor, first floor etc.... For me, there are only contiguous, continual spaces, rooms, anterooms, terraces etc. Storeys merge and spaces relate to each other. Every space requires a different height: the dining room is surely higher than the pantry, thus the ceilings are set at different levels. To join these spaces in such a way that the rise and fall are not only unobservable but also practical, in this I see what is for others the great secret, although it is for me a great maer of course. Coming back to your question, it is just this spatial interaction and spatial austerity that thus far I have best been able to realise in Dr Müller’s house” Adolf Loos, (Shorthand record of a conversation in Pilsen, 1930)
Rumplan means" Solving the floorplan in Space". In Loos work, There are two things very important within his Raumplan. Firstly is a differentiation of the height of the ceiling in differently used rooms, with a strong link to the privacy which the room should provide, secondly the creation of room sequences with the different rooms, with a special importance on the visual connections of the rooms. That means precisely that more private annexes with lower ceilings are spatially connected through stairs, visually trough view-throughs etc. with higher more public rooms. The different heights of the ceiling cause a break-through of the established horizontal layeringof the house. This leads to complex space structures which were made aviable by as well complex vertical circulation by stairs. 



Sections and site drawing, from the site Loos trying to make the house stay as far away from the main road as possible. And there a a secret garden with plenty of trees surround. Because he want to cover some unwanted look from the road and keep the house in private. This Provide a very individual and personal space.



This is the plan drawing. The black solid line shows how each floor been support, and the use of defferent line weight seperate the funature, main wall, staircase and window.                        

"...this spatial interaction and spatial austerity that thus far I have best been able to realise in Dr. Müller’s house" Adolf Loos

The room-cast shows that the dominant room of the house is the hall and assigned to her are the other rooms. The ground floor and the first floor are the really interesting levels for the intrinsic spatial plan (grey tagged in the axonometric projection). The reason for this is that Loos situated in the
second level only the private rooms, like the sleeping room, robing-room and the child`s playroom. Rooms which have the same or similar functions. Based on his idea of the spatial plan Loos gave every room a height according to the function, so the height difference between the rooms arise only between rooms of different functions, which is not given in the second floor. The vertical organisation from public rooms in the ground floor to the private rooms in the upper part of the house is typical for Loos.