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#1 |
Radical Centrist
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Cottage of Prussia
Posts: 31,423
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5/13/2003: Cube houses of Rotterdam
![]() xoxoxoBruce sends along these vacation shots (although not his) of the "Cube Houses of Rotterdam". He says they're famous in Europe. I'd never heard of them before. ![]() He reports that some are businesses and some residences. Googling turns up the following facts: They were designed and built in the early 80s. One guy basically makes a living out of having people tour his house: he's turned it into a museum of sorts. A visitor said he was disappointed at how the interior works (the cube should allow for more interior space but apparently does not). The architect, Piet Blom, thought of his design as an abstract tree and of the total complex as a woods. Units are regularly up for sale and you can get one for about 200,000 Euros. With a view, 250,000 Euros. |
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#2 |
Radical Centrist
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Cottage of Prussia
Posts: 31,423
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Update: a user (dunno if you wanted to stay anonymous) writes to say there is a cube house in Toronto:
http://www.boldts.net/album/CubeHouse.shtml |
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#3 |
Complex Simpleton
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 18
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There are some interior shots here: http://roselli.org/tour/08_2001/189.html
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#4 | |
He who reads, sometimes writes.
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: at the keyboard
Posts: 791
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Quote:
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#5 | |
Alphabetarian
Join Date: Mar 2003
Posts: 12
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Re: 5/13/2003: Cube houses of Rotterdam
Quote:
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__________________
cu, Jaxxon |
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#6 |
Professor
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 1,857
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Well, after looking at them inside and out, I can only think of 2 things; Not a good place to have too much to drink, you'd really feel dizzy with all the tilting walls and you certainly wouldn't have much wall space to hang artwork or pictures on.
Their uniqueness reminds me of the geodesic domes of the early 70's that sprung up in California and other parts. |
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#7 |
Belt Conveyor
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Sioux City, IA
Posts: 66
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It looks like it wouldn't be too hard to set it up so that you could fall against a wall and slide out throught the "basement". It would be hard to overpower the urge to yell "to the Batcave" every time you did it though.
__________________
No, no, you're not thinking, you're just being logical. Niels Bohr, physicist (1885-1962) |
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#8 |
still says videotape
Join Date: Feb 2001
Posts: 26,813
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I love this kinda stuff. Too many houses just don't reflect the sensibilities of the owner, probably due mostly to concerns about resale value. If I were an urbanite, I'd be all over something like that.
__________________
If you would only recognize that life is hard, things would be so much easier for you. - Louis D. Brandeis |
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#9 |
Professor
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 1,857
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Another thought crossed my mind. I wonder how effective these would be at holding up under strong winds, such as hurricanes and the like. One of the big problems with houses and structures in hurricanes are the large sides that are perpendicular to the wind force. Because these are all at angles they might fair better under the force of a large wind.
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#10 |
Professor
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Houston TX
Posts: 1,857
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found this:
Behind these formalist projects stands a quaint story. According to Blom, during a town meeting in Helmond about the residential units, a local man stood up and declared, "The people of this region don't need anything more than a tree to live in." The romantic Blom took these words literally: the project is clearly a cubist depiction of a forest. From a constructive point of view, the trunk of the building is composed of three concrete columns. The Cubes were originally made of coated wooden skeletons, with fiber boards (18 mm) on the inside, and rock wool insulation. The living quarters in the Cubes, the virtual trees, have various spatial implications. The placing of the cubes on their vertex grants the spaces particular interest and the residents enjoy an unusual point of view of the rest of the project and the outside world, through the slanted window. Living above ground grants the community a sense of security. Although in an urban setting, the complex is well maintained and free of the typical vandalism that occurs in areas unpopulated during working hours. The various uses, and correct relation between desirable closure and required openness, create a situation in which even during the day the complex is never deserted. Life "at an angle" is not foreign to the Dutch, a people famous for their ability to maximize use of space, to populate a building's every corner, and even its attics. To offer variety in the life of a complex composed of repetitious cubes, Blom created three kinds of units, organized differently and destined for different purposes: two and three floored cubes designated as residential, and three floored cubes for public purposes. In the small cubes, the walls in the storage and the adjacent staircase rooms on the ground floor are made of stone, as opposed to the light walls of the actual cubes. In the large three storey cubes, the ground floor is used for residents. In one of the vertex is a kitchen and dining room; the bathrooms and storage area are in another vertex, and in the third, a study and work corner. On the middle floor, there are two bedrooms, a bathroom, and a small hallway. In the superior vertex of the cube, another room, in which the windows are high up. All in all, in every cube there are 18 windows and three portholes which allow for unique and interesting perspectives. The windows are double-glazed, reinforced with steel netting where necessary. The project, worn out by the march of the tourists, was renovated in 1998. |
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