The Norwegian architecture firm Sanden + Hodnekvam Architects designed this interesting three-story house, in the city of Lillehammer in Norway. The city, whose pedestrian center is characterized by colorful wooden houses, is located in a very picturesque location, surrounded by mountains and on the northern shore of Lake Mjøsa.

The main objective of the project is to create a convenient and sustainable building that can last over time and that can absorb the evolution of use by adaptation or re-appropriation.

Hence the decision to build a house composed by a repetitive building kit of insulated concrete elements, where the load bearing elements are arranged independently of the inner walls, providing a house that can be adapted to changing needs inhabitants.
The house designed by Sanden + Hodnekvam Architects is spread over three levels and uses the topography of the place, with a height difference of 10 m, to maximize the view. A large part of the house is dug into the hillside, as if it were an integral part of the place.

The exteriors characterize the project as they are covered with prefabricated concrete elements, with iron oxide added to the concrete mix to create the distinct red color.

The visible joints between the prefabricated elements and the lines between the boards in the casting blend, generates a characteristic pattern in the facades.
 

Description of project by Sanden + Hodnekvam Architects

The red house is designed as a repetitive building kit of insulated concrete elements. The load bearing elements are arranged independent of the inner walls, providing the clients with a generous house that can be adapted to changing needs. The rational construction made it possible for the clients to do large parts of the construction themselves.

Housing prices in Norway are high and there are few alternatives to the standardised housing market. As architects we wish to contribute to different forms of living; co-operative housing, self-built housing, intergenerational housing and other home sharing arrangements.

In Lillehammer we have a built project intended for a three-generation family. Due to a relatively large programme and a limited budget, economy became an important factor. We needed to find solutions that were affordable and that would suit the intended use.

The topography at the site is steep, with a height difference of about 10m (32ft) within a 650 sqm site. A large part of the house is dug into the hillside in order to fit the programme to the compact site, and at the same time follow height regulations and maximise the view. The house is angled diagonally to the fall of the terrain in order to generate outdoor spaces of high quality on all sides and to access the view from all three floors.

Based on the limited budget and with two facades partly underground, we chose prefabricated concrete elements as the exterior building material. All facades, both over- and underground are made insulated concrete (Cellcrete) with a 50mm outer layer in pigmented concrete. Iron oxide is added to the concrete mix to create the distinct red colour. The slabs are exposed in the ceiling to make the structure readable.

The rational building system makes construction easier, permits simple detailing and in turn a lower building cost. The visible joints between the prefabricated elements and the lines between the boards in the casting blend, generates a characteristic pattern in the facades. Concrete elements are repeated in order to reuse the formwork for several elements. The repetitive system of separate elements enables a potential reuse of the building materials in the future.  

Wood is often the chosen construction material in projects with high sustainability ambition. However, when we look back at historical buildings of high quality, they are often constructed in stone or concrete – hard and robust materials that are built to last. In the project at Lillehammer we wanted to investigate how to build a house that can absorb the evolution of use as a new hypothesis for a sustainable architecture. It is a house that is built to last by adaption or re-appropriation.

The inner walls are independent of the load bearing system, which means that the plan can be reconfigured. The house can easily be adapted to future residents or changing needs.

The interior of the kitchen and living room is clad in knot-free pine, both on walls and in the ceiling. As for the rest of the house, the concrete slabs are exposed in the ceiling. The floors are covered with standard cement screed. Furniture in pine plywood are built on site.  

The combination of a rational and repetitive building system and the substantial effort from the clients resulted in a very low building cost. Through their own efforts in the building period, the owners of the house have gained substantial knowledge about their own house and they feel a strong ownership to both the process and the end result.

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Architects
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Design team
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John Sanden, Ingvild Hodnekvam, Anders Bjørneseth.
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Dates
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2017-2020.
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Photography
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Sanden + Hodnekvam Architects is an architectural studio based on the Nesodden Peninsula in the Oslo fjord, Norway. The studio was established in 2014 by John Sanden (b. 1984) and Ingvild Hodnekvam (B. 1985) and is engaged in a varied range of projects all over the country -from small scale structures, installations and houses to master plans and large scale competitions.

John Sanden and Ingvild Hodnekvam both studied architecture at the Norwegian University of Technology and Science (NTNU) and at the Aires Mateus diploma unit at Universidade Autónoma de Lisboa (UAL), and received their masters degree in 2012. John Sanden and Ingvild Hodnekvam also teach and appear as guest critics at the Oslo School of Architecture (AHO) and NTNU.

After establishing their studio in 2014, Sanden+Hodnekvam has built several houses which are widely published. In 2019 Sanden+Hodnekvam won the prestigious competition for the UNESCO world heritage site at Bryggen in Bergen. This summer the studio is a part of Wallpaper Architects Directory, listed as one of the worlds most interesting emerging practices.
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Published on: July 6, 2020
Cite: "A house that can be adapted to changing needs. Red concrete house by Sanden + Hodnekvam Architects" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/a-house-can-be-adapted-changing-needs-red-concrete-house-sanden-hodnekvam-architects> ISSN 1139-6415
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