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Design: Pitsou Kedem
Design team architects: Pitsou Kedem, Raz Melamed
Project: Private home
Plot size: 600 square meters. Built-up area: 300 square meters
Photography: Amit Garon
The "Rechter House" in Tel Aviv was originally designed by Zeev Rechter as a single
storey home for his family with an orderly arrangement of internally and externally
exposed, longitudinal concrete beams which formed the basis for the internal spaces,
whilst adhering to the principles of "open planning" that were prevalent in those
years. Over the years, an extra floor and a third wing were added to the building
in such a way that its original form was hidden and the modern design principles
governing its original design were abandoned.
As the project's designer, I was asked to cope with a situation where the house had
been stripped of its original ideas, disconnected from all of its parts and been used by
two, separate families.
The family that purchased this old and neglected building asked me to design them a
home that united all of the parts of the dwelling into one, new fully integrated living
unit, both in terms of its function and its design style.
The main idea behind the project wasn't necessarily to preserve the existing habitat
and its configuration, but rather to conserve the spirit of the original design. With this
in mind, I redesigned the house's external features and internal spaces. I preserved the
horizontal grid and gave it extra intensity when I divided it into two halves through
the use of a spacious double space running its entire length. Within the space, I
placed a stair case that consolidated all the masses of the structure into one single
unit with a huge bookcase along the entire wall that further emphasized the double
space. I zealously preserved the original concrete beams and the broad schematic of
the building. The design and placement of all internal spaces, functions and rooms
was integrated so as not to deviate from the horizontal grid. I also addressed all the
external walls of the house. I made new openings that allowed views from both the
outside into the home and from the inside out. This was done in order to emphasize
the length of the lines and the different architectural elements. On the long façade
fronting the street, I allowed for a dialogue between the structure and the street by
installing vertical, aluminum leaves that move on an axis and allow for a visual
connection between the residents of the house and pedestrians in the street, and a
blurring of the barrier between the private and the public. The movement of the
leaves allows light to enter at differing angles during the day and thus brings life and
drama into the highly organized spaces and the restrained architecture.
The choice of materials (such as the concrete floor and exposed concrete beams, iron
stairs and railings that underwent a prolonged process of rusting, the repeated usage
of the original silicate blocks and various metals placed at differing intervals) was
done with great thought and included materials that are not considered "fashionable"
so that they will not overpower the architecture and will help form a bridge between
the two era's; the first, the original one storey design and the other the new, present
day design. With the new design, I tried to write or present a personal and updated
version of a private dwelling in the spirit of the modern era and in an international
style.
The final result of the architectural design and the new interior design is a reserved
and cultured private home with human proportions and spaces that together form a
strong and clear form, free of unnecessary decorations and designer "chit-chat" with a
clean and moderate form and ideas, that reflect the architectural and social principals
that are so difficult to find in today's modern world.