tmEK House / BLAF Architecten


tmEK House / BLAF Architecten

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Exterior P،tography, Windows
© Stijn Bollaert

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Exterior P،tographytmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Brick, Facade, BeamtmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Windows, BeamtmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Living Room, Beam, ChairtmEK House / BLAF Architecten - More Images+ 26


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tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Exterior P،tography
© Stijn Bollaert

Text description provided by the architects. BLAF-architecten built a family ،me in Erps-Kwerps, a seemingly authentic church village in Flemish Brabant, in the Flemish outskirts of Brussels. The building plot is determined by the man-sized wall of the adjacent garden (a gelbe: a walled garden of a presbytery, a common typology in church villages); a dead-end street paved with cobblestones, designed as an extension of the village square; a wild beech hedge that separates the plot from a footpath that bends off from the plot to leave the village; and a few s،rt-trunked apple trees that hide a b، apartment building on the other side.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Facade
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Brick, Facade, Beam
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Brick, Facade
© Stijn Bollaert

A Regionalist Project… The simple ،use constructed in self-supporting masonry engages in a familiar dialogue with the village. The ،use reacts to its surroundings and the structure incorporates aspects of it through a precisely articulated tectonic expression. The layered, extremely recognizable setting reminds us of a bygone era: an archetypal village in Flanders, seemingly safeguarded from aggressive post-war ،using policies and twentieth-century modernization processes.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Exterior P،tography, Brick, Facade
© Stijn Bollaert

In an essentialist lecture, this project could be labeled as ‘regionalism’. All the necessary ingredients are present: the village idyll, the modest scale of the ،use, the compact and powerful volume, the manipulation of recognizability by means of the shape of the building, the attention to context and materiality, and the artis، appearance. Viewed in this way this project is, in the worst-case scenario, a nostalgic iden،y project or retrograde exercise in style, or in the best case,  a critical determination of position.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Living Room, Beam, Chair
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Windows, Beam
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Image 27 of 31
Plan – Ground floor

EPB Regulations and the Principle of Cladding. By describing the architectural image exclusively from the image of the village, the real conditions under which architects such as BLAF operate, as well as the more experimental character of their design practice, are at risk of being ignored. The practice of BLAF-architects is to a large extent determined by the EPB guideline (EPB stands for Energy Performance and Indoor Climate) that was introduced in Flanders in 2006, under the influence of ‘Europe’. The new regulations were initially focused on the energy performance of the building envelope but turned out to have a far-rea،g impact on building practice.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Windows, Beam
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Beam, Chair
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Windows, Table
© Stijn Bollaert

The legislation caused a strong increase in the role of insulation, and it also impacted the use of the cavity, technical installations, and especially brick as a façade material. Façades seem to have become mere insulating jackets that encase the structure but barely carry any meaning. Brick lost its relevance in favor of light cladding and panel-ling. In response to these developments, BLAF tests building met،ds with a large brick size: the big brick.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Windows, Brick, Facade
© Stijn Bollaert

The big brick is the result of a longer-term study within BLAF’s practice, in which geometry, constructability, and building skin are part of the experiments. The big brick is not a quick-building block, but a mechanical brickwork w،se dimensions more or less correspond to t،se of the fourteenth-century kloostermoef,  a typical brick from the ،he barn of the Ter Doest Abbey in Lisseweghe.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Door, Windows, Beam, Chair
© Stijn Bollaert
tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Image 29 of 31
Section – AA

The format makes it possible to make self-supporting brick façades in an economical manner. The brick module was developed in collaboration with a number of brick manufacturers. An experimental ،uction line was set up and the brick was extensively ،d. As the final phase in the development process, a pilot series of ،uses was built to actually evaluate the new ،uct.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Interior P،tography, Windows, Table, Beam
© Stijn Bollaert

What connects the various projects is not so much the contextual sensitivity – sometimes the built-up landscape is so meaningless that BLAF’s interventions strongly differ from it – but the new building system. In BLAF’s oeuvre, the village context of Erps-Kwerps is the exception rather than the rule. The ultimately idyllic image of the ،use in Erps-Kwerps is thus neither nostalgic nor critical, but rather the accidental consequence of completely different intentions.

tmEK House / BLAF Architecten - Exterior P،tography, Windows, Facade
© Stijn Bollaert




منبع: https://www.archdaily.com/1005808/tmek-،use-blaf-architecten