Residential NO. 18 / FAAM Office
Briefly

Residential NO. 18 / FAAM Office
"The main concept of this project is "Continuity," which is formed from the external body and continues to the interior. The nature of this project is not formed just from the extension of a unique form but from the multiplication of a basic element in architecture, which is the "wall." These thick and pure walls are made from the vertical arrangement of Basalt stone ingots that form the project from the entrance to the roof garden and Project skyline,"
"The nature of this project is not formed just from the extension of a unique form but from the multiplication of a basic element in architecture, which is the "wall." These thick and pure walls are made from the vertical arrangement of Basalt stone ingots that form the project from the entrance to the roof garden and Project skyline, and eventually the whole body. These walls are cut in specific borders of the combination of the facade layers, architectural plan, and structural construction."
The project centers on the concept of Continuity, realized as a material and spatial flow from the external body into the interior. The design logic relies on multiplying the architectural wall rather than extending a singular form. Thick, pure walls are built from vertically arranged basalt stone ingots that shape spaces from the entrance through the roof garden and up to the project skyline, ultimately defining the whole body. These walls are precisely cut at borders determined by the interplay of facade layers, the architectural plan, and structural construction. The vertical basalt ingots establish a consistent material language and structural rhythm throughout the building.
Read at ArchDaily
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