Villa Bôrik

Villa corresponds in volume with its surroundings by hiding about a third of its mass in an underground level. The house itself consists of three floors, each representing a different spatial organization. All floors are connected by a characteristic spiral staircase located outside the square floor plan of the central part of the house.

The house is three-storey high, consisting of two above-ground and one underground floor, with each floor representing a formally different spatial organization. The characteristic spiral staircase connecting all three floors of the house is located outside the square floor plan of the central part of the house, which allows for different layout of each floor. Other specific elements of the villa, which complement its basic cubic volume, are the western “utility” façade forming a filter between the street and the interior and the triangular roof marking the entrance to the house on its northern side.

The surroundings of the villa is characterized by a relatively homogeneous structure of solitary houses at more or less regular intervals. Plots of the individual houses have gardens, which together form a continuous garden landscape. The proposed family house respects this typical intermittent development and occupies the site of a former house. At the same time, it tries to correspond in volume with the surrounding buildings by hiding about a third of its mass in an underground level.

The supporting system of the building consists of a system of monolithic reinforced concrete structures. The two opposite perimeter walls to the south and north support the second floor, the ceilings and partitions of which form one continuous spatial beam. The bracing of the structure is ensured by a vertical staircase tube.