Loft Master Bathroom Design by UNStudio – movable curved wall

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Loft Master Bathroom Design by UNStudio - movable curved wall

Imagine being able to soak in your tub and move the wall to reveal whatever view pleases you most. This design by Ben van Berkel of UNStudio allows you to adjust the amount of privacy in your bathroom, with its curved, movable wall. Bathing in the comfort of your own home doesn’t mean having to isolate yourself into a separate room. The wall can separate the master bathroom from the rest of the apartment if necessary, but it can be left open to create one large and airy space. A pure white palette has been used in this design, along with glass shower doors, which keep the area bright and contemporary, and also keep the focus on the fascinating curve of the wall.

This innovative bathroom design can be found at Five Franklin Place in New York’s TriBeCa neighbourhood, which is the first major American building by Dutch architect Ben van Berkel of UNStudio. B&B Italia ’s Contract Division was called upon to engineer and manufacture this remarkable loft master bathroom design.

Loft Master Bathroom Design by UNStudio - movable curved wall


BURST*008 at MOMA

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prefab, jerry edmiston, douglas gautheir, gauthier architects, system architects, moma prefab, moma home delivery, burst*003, burst, sustainable building, computer modeling housing

Imagine if your house came delivered to you in over a 1,000 precisely-cut jigsaw-like pieces. This is the idea that New York-based, Jeremey Edmiston of System Architects and Douglas Gauthier of Gauthier Architect had for NYC Museum of Modern Art’s Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling exhibition, when they created BURST*008. Combining architecture and technology, the home was computer-designed and its pieces milled to the exact dimensions to fit together like a 3-D puzzle. The pieces were then flat-packed onto a truck and shipped to MoMA’s West Lot, where it was assembled on site, held together by an insulated skin.

prefab, jerry edmiston, douglas gautheir, gauthier architects, system architects, moma prefab, moma home delivery, burst*008, burst, sustainable building, computer modeling housingBURST*003 on MoMA’s West Lot

The model for BURST*008 is unlike other prefab homes because it does not come to the site as an almost completed unit. It is also unique in its formulation of the design of the home. The architects created the BURST homes with the use of computer modeling. A house is computer-drafted based on a set of formulas, client specific needs, and site conditions. The computer program spits out a house design and explodes it into individual pieces.

Then, these 1,000+, non-identical, pieces are laser cut from SIPs or plywood, in such a way to minimize wasted material, and then flat-packed and shipped to the site. Upon arrival, pieces are unloaded, and like an accordion, stretched apart to form the skeleton of the house. The exterior of the house and interior pieces are built in accordingly.

prefab, jerry edmiston, douglas gautheir, gauthier architects, system architects, moma prefab, moma home delivery, burst*008, burst, sustainable building, computer modeling housingConstruction of BURST*008 on West Lot

The BURST*008 is actually a later version of the BURST*003, created as a summer home for a family in Australia. The original Burst home cost $250,00 for 1500 square feet, and as Edmiston says, “Prefab isn’t about saving money; it is about controlling risk.” Which seems to be a fair argument, in light of recent criticism.

You may have read an interesting article recently posted on Jetson Green about prefab and affordability. The article, by Chad Ludeman, developer of the 100K LEED House, says that prefab is not the best way to deliver affordable modern design. The BURST homes seem to agree with this line of thinking: they are clearly not about affordability, but about systematizing the process of designing homes based on specific rules.

prefab, jerry edmiston, douglas gautheir, gauthier architects, system architects, moma prefab, moma home delivery, burst*008, burst, sustainable building, computer modeling housingComputer Model of BURST*008

Still on display at the Home Delivery Exhibition, BURST*008 is one of 5 prefab homes on display on MOMA’s West Lot until October 20, 2008. The homes, constructed specifically for MoMA by 5 architecture teams, are part of an exhibit that explores the history of prefabricated housing from 1833 to the present. Presenting some thought-provoking material, the exhibit, including BURST*008, is a must-see for any architect or designer.

+ System Architects

+ Gauthier Architect

prefab, jerry edmiston, douglas gautheir, gauthier architects, system architects, moma prefab, moma home delivery, burst*008, burst, sustainable building, computer modeling housingConstruction of BURST*008

prefab, jerry edmiston, douglas gautheir, gauthier architects, system architects, moma prefab, moma home delivery, burst*008, burst, sustainable building, computer modeling housingInterior of BURST*008