The project is a weekend home on Ashtamudi Lake in the tropics. It is a sustainable house with a minimal footprint, that upcycles various spaces, components, and materials from a dilapidated structure, that existed on the site. The design retains traces of the existing house while adding new spatial volumes, satisfying the functional requirements of the users.
The site is located on the intermittent level of a terraced hill, sloping towards the lake shore, with access to the lower level. The site had several tropical trees, which were retained and made part of the new intervention.
According to Derrida, our thinking straddles between binary oppositions in language, which often leads to unjustified and unhelpful, privileging of one thing, over the other with regard, to these extremities. Privileging involves a failure to see the merits and values of the supposedly lesser part of the equation. Often times the crux of the matter lies in the `in between, termed as the zone of Différance, rather than the limits. Architecture as with any other art is torn between binary terms, which often leads to privileging. In this house, we are trying to create a permanently oscillating typology of spaces, without privileging of one over the other.
Built over nature
Grid over Fluid
Interior over exterior
Light over darkness
Rustic over Sublime
Conservation over Creation
The sky over Earth.
This house uses extremities of spatial vocabulary while leaving pockets of différance to mediate the meaning of the architecture. We believe that society is transitioning from the extremities of the binary opposites, like east and west, capitalist and communist, man and woman, etc. to a more mature narration of the ‘between’, and our architecture represent this cultural transition and reading of the existing structures of society.