The “Sixty-one”
Architecture studio: Atelier Štěpán, Freedomky
Architect: Marek Štěpán
Email, web: marek@atelier-stepan.cz, www.atelier-stepan.cz, www.freedomky.cz
Address: Tachov, Czech Republic
Client: Mošna & Možiová
Project: 2013 – 2017
Realization: 2017
Area: built-up area 46 m2, usable area of the house 56 m2 , carport 36 m2, terraces 30m2
Expenses: 117 000 €
Photography: Jakub Skokan, Martin Tůma / BoysPlayNice, www.boysplaynice.com
Coauthors: František Brychta
Author’s report
The “Sixty-one”, a home with the number Freedomky No.061, was assembled (to the surprise of neighbours) during one autumn Friday from 7 am to 3 pm, followed by the construction of the carport and terrace. It uses its compositional dimensions and sizes from the author’s previous modules and places them above each other, smaller S (4 x 7m) on top of larger M (4 x 11,5m). Modules were brought to the site fully furnished and equipped, including furniture. The Tachov “Sixty-one” stretches toward the sky and its proportions evoke a similarity with a stylized steamboat, also with the upper terrace – the deck at the fore. From becoming a real houseboat, it is only short of water it could anchor in. It is the very first 2-story Freedomek in the Czech Republic and has its own specially signed label from the author.
The “Sixty-one” conceptually continues along the lines of the inter-war theories of Karel Teige about minimal apartments. Now, several years after presenting No. 001 on Wenceslas square, I find inspiration in the 2-story Baťa half and quarter-houses in Zlín. I was inspired while spending a night in a half-house in Zlín. The “Sixty-one” comes close to Baťa houses in its scale and organization of the interior spaces. The approach to facade division and proportions of window openings may remind one of Corbusier’s houses in the residential area in Pessac. However, the current trend is moving in the direction of mobile and economic housing: it is noticeable in the famous project of the “nomad” apartment cell Loftcube by the German designer Werner Aisslinger. The projects Loftcube and Freedomky are connected by the dream of freedom and by ecological aspects. However, in the base concept they are different. Freedomky are closer to the Central-European region and German speaking countries with its organization of the interior space, and with their material usage of wood and signature design they are true to Ateliér Štěpán. Loftcube has a territorially wider and clientele-wise smaller range.
The “Sixty-one” is 95% wooden. Its bearing structure is from glued wood and has exact joints made according to a Swiss patent. Exact milling of the joint into the shape of a trapezoid are made very simply and their strength is immense. The insulation consists of wood fibre insulation panels that have a beneficial faze shift of day – night. The facade is diffusionally open, made of northern larch. The house is heated by radiant panels, ventilated through local recuperation, and windows are wooden with a triple glass panel. The house sits on five ground foundation strips. The interior is white and wooden and reflects the main construction materials of the house. Furniture is made of birch plywood with hidden hardware, the flooring and staircase from solid oak.
The “Sixty-one” Freedomek works with the author’s principles of “peasant ecology”, therefore a rational ecology created with a “peasant’s sense and wisdom” and not by the pressure of technology. In this approach the winners are simple and thought-out solutions over complicated technological complexes. It does not use pseudo-ecological components that are ineffective and non-economical in this area and would only follow popular trends. The verification of these principles are the yearly energy expenses of this Tachov Freedomek at the pleasant amount of 840 euros.
Products
house MxS / Freedomky / CZ
Larch facade Combi Rhombus / Freedomky / facade, sheating
Fermacel Vapor / Fermacel / inner sheating
Recuperation units / Inventer / wall, facade
Birch plywood /Jafholz / furniture
Levit / ABB / Switches and electrical sockets
HiMacs kitchen counter top, table, niches
Atelier Štěpán
Modern architecture on conservative roots
Atelier Štěpán was founded in 1997 by the married couple Vanda and Marek Štěpán. It focuses on architecture, public space and design. Since then the studio has profiled itself into a firm creating quality Bohemian and Moravian architecture. This has been recognized several times, proved by the several important awards that it has received – Grand prix of architects, the award of the Old Prague Club, Building of the year and Interior of the year, or nominations for the international Mies van der Rohe Award and Piranesi Award. The st. Wenceslas church in Sazovice was chosen by the Canadian magazine Azure as a masterpiece amongst the 10 best buildings in the world in 2017.
The author of the concept of minimal housing, Freedomek, Marek Štěpán is currently at the head of the Laboratory of Sacral Space at the Institute for Architecture (ARC) of the Faculty of Civil Engineering at the Brno University of Technology. During the years 2006-2012 he was an external consultant for architecture for the head of the Office of the President of the Republic. He formulated the theory of décor of structures in architecture. In his work he is inspired by both tradition and modernism.
www.atelier-stepan.cz
Freedomky
Free art of living everywhere.
The company was established in 2010 and immediately presented a prototype of the first Freedomek No. 001 on Wenceslas square. It focuses on creating quality modular, fully equipped “freehouses” that are found in the Czech Republic, Austria, Germany, Switzerland, Slovakia and Slovenia. They are on land as on water like houseboats, they are used for living and commercial leases or even saunas. Fun fact: a sibling of the “Sixty-one” is in the Swiss Lenzburg.
www.freedomky.cz