Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

©Hampus Berndtson

Villa Oreveien

Location: Drøbak, Norway

Architect: Lie Øyen arkitekter

Client: Louise Bergstrøm og Andreas Andersen

Material: concrete, wood & glass

Design date: 2018

Completion date: 2019

Built area: 165m2

Facade cladding: Norsal fiber cement

Architects: Kristoffer Øyen, Tanja Lie, Tai Grung, Paul-Henry Henn a.o.

Interior carpentry: Lie Øyen arkitekter carpenters

Structural Engineer: Consisu, Olav Eide

Floor + pinewood deliverance: Svenneby Sag og Høvleri

Photographer: Hampus Per Berndtson

Entrepreneur: Lie Øyen arkitekter carpenters + Kjetil Melbye

Story:

Text provided by the architects:

The family home was planned on a site where the bedrock was already removed for a different project, leaving a roughly cut stone wall. In the opposite direction, the broad landscape and a sea view offer a very open space. The span from the intimate backside to the extrovert front is connected by a ribbon of glass in heights varying according to the rooms’ various functions.

The entrance is from below, through the concrete platform on which the wooden house is built, across a main outdoor terrace. In addition to the entrance area, four bedrooms with bathroom facilities are on the first floor. On the second level, there is a living area as well as the master bedroom. The top floor with a roof terrace and a sea view contains kitchen and dining spaces and will be the room most in use.

Whereas the houses façade materials are all mineral, the inside is completely made from pine wood in different forms: main structure of beams and columns in laminated wood, massive pine floor, and pine plywood panels.

 

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