The Essence of the Architectural Concept
The essence of my architectural concept lies in viewing Gothic architecture and contemporary design as the intersection of two elemental forces.
This house is intended to express the grandeur of Gothic architectural elements while, in contrast, revealing the lightness and openness of contemporary architecture.
The contrasts between these stylistic origins are not blended, but instead enter into a deliberate dialogue, in which opposites intensify one another, forming a unified and expressive architectural image.
Architecture as Dialogue
The house becomes not a compromise, but a dialogue between two worlds —
past and present, weight and air, memory and freedom.
This is not a stylistic mix, but an architectural intersection,
where opposites do not neutralize each other, but mutually reinforce their presence.
Conceptual Framework
The project is built on tension and balance between two aesthetics:
Gothic — as memory, depth, weight, verticality, shadow, and sacredness
Contemporary architecture — as air, pause, light, freedom, and silence
This is neither stylization nor eclecticism, but a conscious coexistence.
Architectural and Visual Expression
Mass and Lightness
Gothic expression is perceived through proportions, rhythm, depth of openings, and a sense of the building’s corporeality.
Contemporary architecture is revealed through clarity of lines, restraint of gesture, and light.
Vertical and Horizontal
The upward Gothic aspiration is counterbalanced by contemporary horizontal calm.
Shadow as Material
Shadow is not concealed — it becomes part of the composition, intensifying the presence of light.
Entrance as Symbol
A transition between worlds: from heaviness to transparency, from history to the present.
Core Concept of the Project
This house is conceived as an intersection of two elemental forces —
Gothic architectural monumentality and contemporary lightness.
Here, Gothic is manifested not as a style, but as a formative force:
through verticals, depth, rhythm, tectonics, and a sense of weight and timelessness.
Contemporary architecture, by contrast, acts as the element of air and light —
purity of lines, openness, pauses, transparency, and spatial freedom.