0

Poesenvanhiel architects

1902 . Brussels

POESENVANHIEL architects . photos: © Tim van De Velde

This loft consists of a large but badly organised open space, so we were put to the task of finding a way to create a sensible partition between day and night. To this end, we placed a glass curtain wall with sliding door panels following the course of the existing steel columns, with an offset of a typical corridor. As a result, the resident who moves around in the middle of the loft no longer has to criss-cross all over the place.

Where the resident requires more privacy, textured glass was used. The moving elements are made from a different material than the fixed parts, so that the sliding doors are highly intuitive to use. By leaving the panels open, the feeling of a loft is kept alive, but if need be, the resident can also retreat in peace and quiet behind closed panels, which separate her from the other residents.
_

Place, Belgium – Brussels
Photo’s by Tim van De Velde
Year 2020-2021