8 Dynamic Wood Façades Built with Kinetic Cladding

Whether looking to take advantage of wind patterns or bring daylight into a space, contemporary projects have begun exploring the potential of kinetic and operable façades.

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Great buildings frame new perspectives. When specifying cladding, designers are increasingly testing out novel ways to embrace local contexts and open up to outside conditions. Whether looking to take advantage of wind patterns or bring daylight into a space, contemporary projects have begun exploring the potential of kinetic and operable façades. Modern wood-clad façades are no exception, where building envelopes are programmed to enhance interior conditions through haptic connections and integrated systems. Each new design is made to bring out the character of wood assemblies.

Dynamic façades activate space, drawing out relationships between light, environment, view and void. They encourage exchange and accommodates varied levels of privacy. Adding warmth and elegance, the following kinetic wood facades were designed through studies in transparency and liminal conditions. Together, they show how we can frame new perspectives by rethinking how we connect to everyday cladding.

© Mihaly Slocombe

Kids Pod by Mihaly Slocombe, Merricks, Australia

Kids Pod was built as a pavilion extension to an existing house connected to the original through a glazed bridge. Located on a vineyard towards the southernmost tip of Australia, the project’s external timber cladding reinterprets the landscape and its protective tree canopies. CNC-routed boards are mounted onto customized, operable shutters that close at night to create a glowing texture on the façade.

© Stijn Poelstra

© Stijn Poelstra

Recreation House in the Surrounding of Utrecht by Zecc Architecten, Utrecht, Netherlands

As a compact recreation house, this project in Utrecht was built on an existing garden house with new structure and envelope with wood window shutters. The vertical fin façade and horizontal slats rotate to be both transparent and completely closed.

© MHM architects

© MHM architects

Boat’s house at Millstätter Lake by MHM architects, Seeboden, Austria

Formed at the line between water and ground, MHM’s boathouse design integrates a system of folding façade cladding. The folding elements can transform into a completely horizontal, passable surface. The variability creates an iridescent impression of the building from around the lake.

© Herbst Architects

© Herbst Architects

Castle Rock House by Herbst Architects, Northland, New Zealand

Located on the crest of a seaside knoll, the Castle Rock House overlooks the coastline and a wet gully. The holiday residence was designed to challenge boundaries between nature and built form. Referencing the New Zealand “Kiwi bach,” the house manipulates traditional scale, materiality and form.

© Andrew Burges Architects

© Andrew Burges Architects

Pittwater House by Andrew Burges Architects, Sydney, Australia

Created as a beach retreat for a retired couple, Pittwater House was built with a stone base and timber to recall early Palm Beach houses. The operable façade was inspired by rope and pulley systems used by the boats adjacent to the house. The envelope includes stainless steel outriggers, linear actuators, and wood cladding.

© Joao Morgado - Architecture Photography

© Joao Morgado - Architecture Photography

Quinta dos Pombais by OPERA | Design Matters, Castelo de Vide, Portugal

Located at Alentejo, this house was oriented to views of the surrounding landscape. Built with a program that could expand over time, the home embraces Portugal’s climate through its operable façade cladding that extends over the roof between multiple façades.

© Richard Kirk Architect

© Richard Kirk Architect

Lot 170 by Richard Kirk Architect, Sunshine Coast, Australia

Crafted with standardized materials and details to help control construction quality, this residential project occupies the majority of the allowable building space onsite. Interior spaces were designed with an introspective focus, both functionally and visually. Timber was selected along the exterior that could weather naturally and open to the elements, while finishes were kept to a minimum.

© Lang + Schwärzler

© Lang + Schwärzler

© Lang + Schwärzler

Badehaus Am Kaiserstrand by Lang + Schwärzler, Am Kaiserstrand, Lochau, Austria

Designed as a bathhouse in western Austria, this project looks out to views of Pfaender Mountain and the Bay of Bregenz. Raised on a series of piers, the structure is connected to the coast of Lake Constance and extends a cultural promenade with kinetic wood cladding opening to lake views.

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