Project posted by Nicola Gibertini

HV Pavillon. A patio house at the foot of mount Amiata, Tuscany, Italy.

Structure
House (Single Residence)
Style
Modern
South facade
South facade
Saouth facade detail
Saouth facade detail
Saouth facade detail
Saouth facade detail
East facade
East facade
Detail of the North facade
Detail of the North facade
Detail of the North facade
Detail of the North facade
Detail of the West  facade
Detail of the West facade
Internal patio
Internal patio
The drystone wall of the facades
The drystone wall of the facades
Dining area
Dining area
Kitchen
Kitchen
Kitchen
Kitchen
Living area
Living area
Living area
Living area
Restroom
Restroom
Restroom
Restroom
Restroom
Restroom
Restroom
Restroom
Bedroom
Bedroom

6 more photos

Details

Square Feet
230

Credits

Architect
GGA gardini gibertini architects
Interior Design
GGA gardini gibertini architects
Landscape Design
KRISTOF HUYSECOM
Builder
AC COSTRUZIONI
Photographer
EZIO MANCIUCCA

From Nicola Gibertini

Surrounded by an olive grove, HV Pavillon is the project of a residence in the foothills of Amiata Mount
in the Tuscan Maremma.

Raised off the ground, the building is presented as a pavilion released to the landscape in a theatrical way:

a proscenium. It’s a spatial mechanism for admiring the surrounding nature claiming its belonging

to the place and to its secular history.

HVP is a typical Mediterranean architecture facing the issue of a residence in its more archaic typological

and construction principles.

Eight structural boxes settled on a reinforced concrete platform support the solid stone floor covering.

The spaces in the house are geometrically configured around a central patio of Roman-Italic reminiscence:

“Atrium Tusculanum". The interior is just structure and raw materials aimed at celebrating the contemporary

approach to detail solutions. The floor is made of cementitious resin and it has the colour of sun-scorched

grass in the warmer months and chestnut leaves in autumn.

Natural wood completes the volumes and all the furnishings are customised.

A steel kitchen island and a monumental cast-in place cement table celebrate the rite of good Italian cuisine

emphasising the convivial character of the house.

The table is the secular altar in the centre of the visible scene from every room in the house.

The facility is a spatial continuum between the intimate hearth and the olive grove without blackout

filtering elements except the light linen curtains.

Outside the rigor of geometry is compact and cohesive in proportions and it honours the local country building

tradition of “dry stone” walls on anthropized soil, whereas the wood infills recall the locking elements

of the amiatini traditional rural buildings called “seccatoi” - dryers for chestnuts -.

In this way, the building merges with the landscape and ties it profoundly into its own history.