Thursday, October 28, 2010

House Equanimity : By Joseph N. Biondo

Northampton, Pennsylvania, United States
Joseph N. Biondo

Post By:Kitticoon Poopong 
House Equanimity
Photo © Steven Wolfe
Situated in a nondescript subdivision of Eastern Pennsylvania, this 3,100-square-foot house is surrounded by other single-family houses of all shapes and sizes. The primary building materials—site poured concrete and various other concrete products—pay respect to the history of Northampton, the birthplace of American Portland Cement. Today’s modern cement plants consist of framed boxes perched atop a series of concrete monoliths that loom in the landscape of the region. These industrial places, along with the material they produce, have greatly influence the design of this house.


House Equanimity
Photo © Steven Wolfe
Design concept and solution: 
The architect intended this single-family, three-bedroom house to be closer in spirit to the forest and the topography around it than to its neighboring houses. The main living area is a sheltered oasis whose face is half buried below grade. From here no views to the east are available except to the walled courtyard beyond. Interior textures, including unpainted concrete walls, unpainted wood-framed windows, and stainless steel handrails, invite you to touch.

House Equanimity
Photo © Steven Wolfe 

Deliberately crude in its execution, the concrete base of the house is treated as an existing condition, or ruin, into which wood-framed, cement-clad boxes are carefully inserted, supported by a flat, concrete platform. The ruin’s powerful presence is derived from its material qualities and from the way it is linked to the ground. It penetrates into the earth and becomes more clearly defined as the topography falls away. The concrete will age, become discolored, and perhaps slowly erode over time, even as the house still stands.

House Equanimity
Photo © Steven Wolfe
House Equanimity
Photo © Steven Wolfe
House Equanimity
Photo © Steven Wolfe
House Equanimity
Image courtesy Joseph N. Biondo
House Equanimity
Image courtesy Joseph N. Biondo
House Equanimity
Image courtesy Joseph N. Biondo
House Equanimity
Image courtesy Joseph N. Biondo
  

People

Architect
Joseph N. Biondo, Architect
1720 Spillman Drive Suite 200
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania  18015-2169
610-865-2621 Tel
610-865-3236 Fax
Architect of record:
Joseph N. Biondo, AIA
Interior designer:
Joseph N. Biondo, AIA
Engineer:
E.D Pons Associates, Structural
General contractor:
Joseph N. Biondo, AIA
Hoffert General Contractors
Photographer
Steven Wolfe
610-867-2274

Products

Structural system:
Reinforced Concrete, Engineered Lumber, Structural Steel
Exterior cladding
Concrete:
Reinforced cast in place Concrete
Wood:
Weyerhaeuser Trus joist
EIFS, ACM, or other:
James Hardie cement panels
Roofing
Metal:
McElroy corrugated galvalume
Other:
Lead coated copper flashings and sheet metal
Windows
Wood:
Duratherm
Doors
Entrances:
Duratherm
Sliding doors:
Duratherm
Hardware
Locksets:
Gretsch-Unitas Hardware
Interior finishes
Cabinetwork and custom woodwork:
Jonathan Fallos Cabinet Makers
Paints and stains:
SIKKENS, Sherwin Williams
Lighting
Interior ambient lighting:
Lightolier
Downlights:
Lightolier
Plumbing
Toto
Duravit