2011 Dwell

Page 1

Harvest Boon

DWELLINGS

Villa Welpeloo in Enschede, the Netherlands, doesn’t look like a recycled building. Its austere lines and spacious interior have nothing of the junkyard aesthetic about them. Yet despite appearances, it’s reused to the bones. To accomplish this, architects Jan Jongert and Jeroen Bergsma of 2012Architects reversed the typical order of the design process— first house, then materials—and instead began by scouting the local area for items to recycle. Villa Welpeloo was the architects’ first house, designed for clients Tjibbe Knol and Ingrid Blans. “Reused materials account for 60 percent of the structure,” says Jongert. “And that goes up to as much as 90 percent when it comes to the interior.” The benefit of this approach, which Jongert and Bergsma like to call “recyclicity” or “superuse,” is, of course, a greatly reduced construction carbon footprint, due to material recycling and lower transportation costs. But it’s also, insists Jongert, “a way to reach a very high level of lively aesthetics.”

Ingrid Blans and Tjibbe Knol (opposite) relax outside their home. The glass doorway features an etched poem by Dutch writer Willem Wilmink, who is also known for a piece commemorating the firework disaster that ravaged the site ten years ago. Inside, a vintage shop display case exhibits a small fraction of the couple’s collection of art and objects. The recycled builder’s elevator (right) is a practical touch, and allows easy transportation of artwork and furniture between floors.

90 February 2011

Dwell


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2011 Dwell by Superuse Studios - Issuu