Bearth & Deplazes: Tower House Fläsch
Bovelweg 25, Fläsch
Architect
Design team
Valentin Bearth, Andrea Deplazes, Daniel Ladner
Client
Claudia a Andrea Meuli
Year
1997 - 2001
Web architect
Photographs
Ruedi Walti, Stijn Rolies
Public access
A tower house at the edge of the village, containing the street area in the transition to the vineyards. The walls are cast single shell in insulating concrete with rough-sawn panel insulation. Interior white-coated with thin, lime sludge. Kitchen with seating area in the garden, open living space under the roof.
This tower-like house in fair-faced concrete stands guard over the edge of the village, bordering a lane leading to the vineyards beyond. Compact and sculptural like the old town houses in Fläsch, it owes is five-sided figure to the angular plot that led to a corset-like outline for the house, with a small garden on the south side. The living areas are divided on three floors: a garden level with kitchen/diner and guest room, above that the bedrooms, and at the top, the main living room with studio. All walls are of in-situ concrete, finished inside with a coat of grey-white plaster skim applied thinly so as to retain most of the roughness and the joint marks left by the formwork. This type of treatment only became feasible thanks to the invention of insulation-grade structural concrete. The 50 cm thick, single-skin, monolithic outer walls of the “tower-house“ have windows fitted flush on the inside. Although the house was built using technology quite different to that traditionally employed in the village, it nevertheless contributes more to the mature structure of this settlement and to the identity of Fläsch that any stylistic plagiarism. A Semper-like metamorphosis is perhaps detectable in the way the traces of the wooden formwork have been retained, thereby integrating the monolith more with the nearby farm buildings.
(text source: website architect)
