Panorama House
Panorama House
Category: Houses, Recreational
Client: Private
Year: 2020
Status: Under Construction
Area: 150 sq m
Renderings: Sebastian Grochowski
Location: Lower Silesia
Architect: Ligia Krajewska, Jakub Pstraś
Photographer: Artur Krajewski
Picture from the construction site
Where Architecture Meets the Landscape …
More than just a home, this is a quiet dialogue between nature and design. Subtly integrated into the natural landscape, the building floats above the meadow, offering privacy, lightness and unique views of the mountain panorama.
Its bold, horizontal silhouette and expansive southern glazing blur the line between interior and exterior, framing breathtaking mountain views from nearly every room. A home that doesn’t just occupy the land—but becomes part of it.
Implementation is coming to end
On a spacious landscaped plot overlooking the Karkonosze Mountains, surrounded by a forest, a residential and outbuilding was designed. The residential building is situated in the central part of the plot. This results in a natural division of the land into an “organized” zone with an orchard, vegetable garden and outbuilding in the northern part of the plot and a “natural flower meadow” zone in the south. The outbuilding is designed on a flat area, at the northern border of the plot, sheltered by forest and near a vegetable garden and orchard.
Situational Plan
The contemporary form of the designed buildings finds a reference in regional architecture. The rectangular view and symmetrical gable roof refer to the urban layout of rural area. The use of natural materials and motifs, e.g. formwork of peak facades, concrete underpinning, or tile roofing, ensure that the buildings are adapted to local buildings.
Structural diagram
The structure of the residential building was created based on a collage of three material elements: architectural concrete underpinning, a solid ground floor wall, between which glass fillings and masonry division walls were used. The whole is completed by the supplied top facades, covered with formwork from wood fired by the method of Shou Sugi Ban. Together with the roof, they form a consistent color element.
Ground Floor Plan
Southern facade of the house facing the mountains
House's entrance
Axonometry