When a couple of architects have children, a big garden and a too much creativity a lot of things can happen. In this case the construction of a small playhouse during 15 days, with a bit more than 10 m² and a budget smaller than 1.000€. A small construction, colorfull and graceful , whose construction process video we recommend you to see!

The most beautiful projects often come with very little. This is the case of the Playhouse, built by Anna and Eugeni Bach in the oneiric children grandparent's farm, a rural finnish landscape. Just seeing how the memory of the project starts we realized it was worth it!

The project is designed through its section, in a 'children scale', pretending to create a variety of spaces where the biggest adventures can take place. Three different spaces organize the inner of the house, one doble-height, another smaller and a third one whose access is through a ladder, something with every children dream about. Everything through two opposed modules, built in wood and painted with a funny white bands.

For its construction they only spent 15 days and 800€, the help and collaboration of the children and grandparents and a lot of energy and happiness.

Besides we recommend you the video of the construction progress, as happy as all the rest.
 

Description of the project by the architects

When an architect couple has young kids, there will arrive a day when they ask:

- Mom, dad,… You´re architects, aren´t you?

- Yes…

- And you make houses for people?

- Yes, of course,…

And then comes the key question:

- So why don´t you do a house for us?

In such a situation, there are two possibilities: find an excuse to avoid it, or promise them that you will make a house especially designed for them.

We found ourselves in this stuation last summer, and we promised them that we would build a house for them on their grandparents farm in Finland. And, of course, at the kids insistence we fulfilled our promise.

The cottage is mainly based on a section: the structure is very simple, repeated in two equal modules but oriented in opposite directions. One of these modules is double-height (to the scale of children), which allows an adult to enter the house without having to bend. The other module has two levels, connected by a simple ladder allowing a more complex game inside.

This simple starting point means that from the outside, the house acquires the presence of an almost abstract object, without reference to the scale; while inside, when crossing the two modules you can identify the prototypical section of a childish house, with the typical symmetrical roof, like those we drew ourselves when we were kids.

The interior becomes what children understand as an essential house: a larger space that could be the living room, a lower space where the kitchen could be imagined and a higher ground where there could be the rooms. The abstract nature of the interior spaces allows a child´s imagination to flow, and those spaces that could be identified as a domestic interior can suddenly become the dungeon of a medieval castle, or the attic in the main tower from which to shoot arrows at enemies.

The construction of the house took two weeks. It was all built by two persons (ourselves, plus two little helpers), and was an educational process as rewarding as pedagogic: children saw and understood that things are achieved with effort, and that you can build your own dreams.

For the structure and the floors we used spruce wood from the grandparent´s farm, from trees planted by the kids´ great grandfather and cut by their grandfather. The rest of the wood was bought at the hardware store, from small wood sawmills in the area.

The whole house is made of wood; structure, floors, walls and roof, using traditional construction techniques used in Finnish barns such as leaving a nail distance between slats to ventilate the house, or a roofing system made from a simple overlapping of grooved wooden planks to prevent the ingress of water.

Only a small galvanized flashing helps protecting the wood cuts at the facades.

The house was painted with vertical white stripes, which persist on the roof and help to explain the original section of the project. The rest of the wood is left untreated, so that over time it will take a grayish hue that will increasingly contrast with the painted surfaces, showing more obviously as time goes on, and also symbolising how children get older. These strips give a festive character to the volume, likening it to a fair house or an old beach changing hut, although in this case, its location in a rural environment, surrounded by apple trees, adds a more dreamlike character.

Text.- A&EB.

 

CREDITS.-

Architects.- Anna & Eugeni Bach, architects.
Collaborators.- Uma and Rufus Bach (promoter and owners).
Date.- July 2011 (project), 10-24 August 2011 (construction).
Built surface.- 13,50 m2.
Budget.- 800€.
Construction.- by Anna & Eugeni Bach.

 

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Anna Bach, Nummi, Finland, 1973. Architect from the Helsinki University of Technology (2001) and Master in Project Theory and Practice from ETSAB, UPC. She is a PDI professor at EINA, Barcelona University Center for Design and Art, UAB. His work has been awarded, among others, with the International FAD Award, the FAD Ephemeral Work Award and the FAD Opinion Award on four occasions, as well as Finalist and Selected in the Spanish Biennial and the Ibero-American Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism, Nominated for the European Architecture Mies van der Rohe and exhibited in venues such as the Cité de l'Architecture in Paris or the Spanish Pavilion at the XV Venice Biennale.

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Eugeni Bach, Barcelona, Spain 1974. Architect by the Higher Technical School of Architecture of Barcelona, UPC (1999), Professor of Projects at the ETSAB UPC and the Master EPAI of the ETS Arquitectura La Salle, URL. His work has been awarded, among others, with the International FAD Award, the FAD Award for Ephemeral Work and the FAD of Opinion on four occasions, as well as a Finalist and Selected in the Spanish Biennial and the Ibero-American Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism, Nominated for the Award of European Architecture Mies van der Rohe and exhibited in venues such as the Cité de l'Architecture in Paris or the Spanish Pavilion at the VII and XV Venice Biennale.

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