C+V House, Italy / by GIOVANNI VACCARINI architetto

C+V HOUSE / by GIOVANNI VACCARINI architetto

GIOVANNI VACCARINI architetto shared with us their project, the C+V House. The House Capece Venanzi is a suburban house, on the Adriatic coast, in the segment between Ascoli Piceno and Pescara. It’s an “intermediate” area (apparently) “without quality”; a strip of land without buildings, between the plain and the hill. The project idea is to construct a building with an approach completely open to the hill, the hill that is seen as a sort of green “sea” on which to overlook.

C+V HOUSE / by GIOVANNI VACCARINI architetto
by Giovanni Vaccarini

The plant is defined by a development on three levels:

  • basement level, fully excavated in the soil, an internal patio is the element around which to organize the space, making a game between underground spaces;
  • ground floor is the collective part of the building, where a large sliding glass door marks the border between the open roof garden and the covered living area. The space revolves around a laminated metal stair that connects with the first floor.
  • the first floor receives the rooms and three private spaces of the building (bath / sauna, gym, studio).
C+V HOUSE / by GIOVANNI VACCARINI architetto
by Giovanni Vaccarini

The main compositive topic is played on the metaphor of the macrotransposition of a piece of the game of tetris. The two opposing volumes put on scene the two parts of the building and point to the diversity of use with a double treatment: a plinth clad in stone with a mass of white plaster. The base of stone is “cut” on the western front by a glass wall at full height, while the stereometric volume on the ground floor has a network of free-form and circular openings.

C+V HOUSE / by GIOVANNI VACCARINI architetto
by Giovanni Vaccarini

The series of free holes are also the pattern of aluminium panels that screen the large south-west openings and that shifts to the ground floor drawing fences, gates and closure systems. The light is one of the materials of the project. The system of openings cut into the wall and on the covering floor designs the shadows during the day and lights from the second floor; on the ground floor light floods all the spaces. At night, a led lighting system (managed by a controller) defines a set of “backgrounds” that transform the first floor glass façade in a luminous screen.

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