Open Plan Kitchen and Dining Area The Sliding House Suffolk England. Photo:Jeff Gilbert

Open Plan Kitchen and Dining Area The Sliding House Suffolk England. Photo:Jeff Gilbert Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Jeff Gilbert / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

C05NR8

File size:

36.4 MB (1.3 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

2911 x 4367 px | 24.6 x 37 cm | 9.7 x 14.6 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

11 May 2009

Location:

The Sliding House, Suffolk, England, United Kingdom

More information:

Alex de Rijke, founding director of dRMM Architects in London, and his client for the Sliding House hadn’t seen each other since their days as schoolmates and teenage motorcycle enthusiasts. “I knew that Alex had become an architect, ” says the homeowner, “and I Googled him and saw that his company was doing amazing work.” The client had an almost 4-acre plot of land in Suffolk, a mix of rolling hills and flat coastal landscape (Holland, and its horizontal geography, is just across the North Sea), and wanted a weekend getaway where he and his wife could grow their own food, entertain friends and family, and get away from London. What he got instead went from country retreat to full-time home and office (London is now the weekend stay), and from straightforward construction to an inspired, unconventional surprise—a 2, 153-square-foot house that transforms from an enclosed volume to a fully glazed, greenhouse-like structure, all with the push of a button. The house was “self-build”, meaning the homeowner managed the construction himself—not a small feat for a building as technologically comples as this one. It begins simply enough with three barnlike volumes—a linear house separated from an office/studio by a patio, and a garage pulled off-axis, creating a courtyard between the three. Then, a surprise: A 20-ton mobile, shell of steel, timber, insulation, and unstained larch wood set on a track system powered by four hidden car batteries charged by solar roof panels (they can also be charged from outlets), that can slide across the site—covering the house, which is glazed from roof to floor, or creating other combinations of partial enclosure. “There was some internal and some external inspiration for the design, ” says de Rijke. “A lifelong love of movement and surprises together with the paradoxical site qualities.” Also, “playing with the English lack of summer houses, and a love of Dutch barn models and motorcycles.” The “sleeve” takes six minutes to completely uncov