A house that is integrated into a densly urbanised slope of a historic Vilnius suburban area dictates a new
quality and aesthetics. The structure comes in contrast with it‘s surrounding architecture – wooden wreckage
from the beggining of the 20th century and gigantic residential houses of early Lithuanian indepencende
years that might remind a small school rather than a residential house. Even so, the house remains cultured,
eligible and appropriate while firmly stating the new level of architectural value.
A cube-like wooden volume is integrated into thesurrounding landscape
containing all rationally sized rooms that a family of four might need.