TIND PREFAB HOUSES | CLAESSON KOIVISTO RUNE

Images and plans about about the new prefab house by Swedish architects Claesson Koivisto Rune that we featured some days ago, were released today via dezeen.



image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

Tind house is designed as a client-flexible house with distinctive contemporary details, with construction opportunities for a single-storey residence or a family home with two or three floors.

The house is manufactured by Swedish house builder Fiskarhedenvillan and will be presented at the Globo Art Space in Milan.

Sources:    http://dezeen.com
                  http://ckr.se
                  http://www.fiskarhedenvillan.se


image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

image © Peter Guthrie courtesy of Claesson Koivisto Rune | Fiskarhedenvillan

 Description from Claesson Koivisto Rune:

Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects is showing for the first time to an international audience their new house called Tind. Tind is a prefab house and represents a brand new typology for this particular field.

Globo being a manufacturer of sanitary porcelain, it is perhaps peculiar to show architecture during the Salone del Mobile. But Globo Art Space is not a commercial scene but a new gallery space offered by Globo to promote art, architecture and related culture in general.

Claesson Koivisto Rune is also a product and furniture design practice, but is during this event proud to present their architecture, by showing their most recent project. It will also be an example of the Scandinavian approach to living, not in the usual historic, modernistic context, but right now, right here.

The Tind* house is a new prefab house by Swedish Claesson Koivisto Rune Architects. Manufactured by Fiskarhedenvillan and provided to clients as a complete building kit.
The prefab/kit house market is traditionally conservative and generally prefers fake historical over contemporary. And it is more than common that an architect has not been involved at all. If this is from neglect on the manufacturers' side or arrogance from the architects' is difficult to know. What we do know, is that it is time for change.

We have built a house built on a concept built on a set of features. The prefab house needs to be flexible in size and configuration to accomodate individual families' needs and individual locations. So in order to maintain the houses' architectural integrity it is some strong features rather than exact dimensions that are important.

The first feature is the roof:
The traditional Swedish one-family house has a single-pitch roof. With its pitch angle not as steep as in Germany and not as gentle as in Italy, but in between. The Tind house's roof starts with this typical Swedish pitch. But then the peak is cut off. So that the roof becomes somewhat of a hybrid between single-pitch and flat.

The second feature is the window niches:
First, windows are few, but big, and allocated to the most important walls, rather than many, small and on every wall. Second, every opening, window or door, is flush with the interior. Furthermore the thicknesses of the joists are disguised by bevelling the niche. This allows the house to become a rhythmic composition of wall and void, wall and void. Rather than the usual volume with punched holes.

The third feature is alignment:
The division between roof and walls is clear and sharp; like a waistline. Sharp is also the one-side alignment between windows on overlying floors. Every line and every cut aligns with another; with the next.

The interior layout is generous in spatial flow and efficient in actual flow. The entrance and staircase is at the core. Directly onward lies the communal living, dining and kitchen area. A second, side entranceway goes through a combined storage and wash room. For brushing off your shoes or dog from a muddy walk in the forest before entering the living areas. Bedrooms and bathrooms are either upstairs, downstairs or to the side end of the house. The general ambience is that of outdoor and indoor being connected.

* Tind is Norwegian for Mountain Peak. One difference between the Scandian mountain range and most other mountain ranges, such as the Alps, is the lack of sharp pointed peaks. This because the last big ice age shaved them off when retracting. In Scandinavia we find our mountains particularly beautiful because of this feature.