The Butterfly House is located near green hills, in the country of Gapyeong (50 km north east from Seoul), which cultural and environmental context has deeply influenced the concept of the building.
A building is considered sustainable according to how well it integrates with the natural elements of the surrounding landscape and with the habits of its inhabitants.

This thought has been the springboard for designing a ‘house system’ in which the respect for local housing tradition (deeply linked to nature), affordability, the energy saving features of the building and the integration with the surrounding environment well blend together, following the principles of Feng Shui.

The house is based on two units, one for a family, the other for grandparents, and his figure is defined by large panoramic terraces, shaped like the wings of a butterfly, open through the landscape.
Sustainability, affordability and the visual relation with the surrounding landscape are the main focuses of the project, developed through local cheap technological solutions, natural ventilation, high insulation and large windows and terraces shaped like the wings of a butterfly.

These elements characterize not only the articulated figure of the building, defining masses, voids, translations and rotations, but also becoming passive systems able to optimize solar radiation and wind collectors able to catch summer breezes too.
During winter, terraces work as barriers versus cold winds, protecting the house from bad weather.
Building orientation follows climatic and functional reasons: optimization of natural ventilation and sunshine inside the apartments during the year.

2010

2010

Program: no. 2 residential units
Built Surface : 217 sq.m.
Footprint : 180 sq.m.

Architects: DONNER SORCINELLI ARCHITECTURE
design team : Luca Donner (team leader), Francesca Sorcinelli, Seong Bong Yun

Consultants:
Local Architect Studio NakHyunJae, Nak-yong Choi
Works Manager NR2, Jun-bo Sim
Construction Management NR2, Sang-chun Lee

Butterfly House by Luca Donner in Korea, South won the WA Award Cycle 10. Please find below the WA Award poster for this project.

poster
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