MIA Design Studio covers Vietnamese home with protruding planters
Cuboid planters containing trees and shrubs protrude from the elevations of this home in Saigon, Vietnam, designed by MIA Design Studio.
Called Sky House, the house was designed by MIA Design Studio to create a sense of being close to nature within its busy urban surroundings.
The living spaces of the three-storey home are set back from the site boundary, protected by a buffer space of planted terraces and looking inwards to a central, sky-lit atrium.
"Without interference to the land or the intention to use up areas for unnecessary rooms, we divided the house in half," said the studio.
"The first half is devoted to the sun, wind, water and trees, or simply empty spaces, the other half is presented for family activities with minimal utilities."
The cube-shaped form of the home sits atop a larger, lower form, which acts as a podium level as well as providing an entry route alongside parking and storage spaces.
A large living, kitchen and dining area sits in the centre of this ground floor space, flanked by a pond and a small garden and illuminated from above by the central void that cuts through the full height of the home.
Photo is by Oki Hiroyuki
While the upper levels have been finished in bright white, this lower level has a more sheltered atmosphere, its ceilings lined by thin wooden slats that allow daylight to filter in.
Following the central void upwards through the home, bedrooms and terraces have been arranged at its edges, looking down to t...
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