The Roof House

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

THE ROOF HOUSE

Guò bàn ér

ARCHITECTS
Guo ban er

DESIGN TEAM
ChristianTaeubert, SunMin, Wenbo Yue, Shiyu Ma

STYLIST
Jian Han

PHOTOGRAPHS
Boris Shiu

AREA
240 m²

YEAR
2020

LOCATION
Beijing, China

CATEGORY
Houses, Renovation

Located around 60 km north of Beijing's city center at the foothills of the Great Wall of China, the architects were given the task to add a modest extension to a vacant rural house.

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

By extending the original roof slope of the existing dwelling, 过半儿 guò bàn ér constructed an additional 120 square meters of living area.

The extension placed at the garden level creates a much-intended split level between the dining area and the living room.

The newly added pitched roof shelters the core social areas of the house.The roof kinks up at its east-side and west-side, accommodating a tea room and a small spa area.

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

Four skylights flood the lounging area with additional daylight, and floor-to-ceiling windows on the formerly windowless north-side provide cross ventilation.

The roof slope ends at over two meters in height, scaling the nine-meter-wide glass opening facing the garden to a fitting human scale.The exterior wooden deck frames the garden with its path and connects both wings of the house with the terrace of the living area.

In summer, the folding glass windows of the tea room and the spa area and the large sliding doors of the living area open up, extending all domestic activities towards the garden.

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

The cantilevering concrete roof provides cover for the timber deck, which serves as an extension of the footprint of the home and its indoor entertainment areas.

"Creating an airy main space which provides flexibility for a wide range of living activities was key," says Sun Min, Co-founder of 过半儿 guò bàn ér.

The large open fireplace is a motif for the comfort added to the house and its contemporary rural character. However, the actual comfort stays somewhat invisible.

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

Instead of replacing the rather non-descript existing building, the architects integrated it, driven by repurposing the existing structure, saving energy wasted in new construction.

The old building was retrofitted with a continuous exterior insulation envelope which continues on the building's new extension.

Insulted floors provide for an efficient air-to-water floor heating system that can be switched to cooling mode during the hot summers of Beijing.

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

An efficient electric heat pump powers the heating and cooling system providing pleasant room climates in winter and summer.

"We focused on creating high-quality living spaces that we can realize on a budget," says Christian Taeubert, Co-founder of 过半儿 guò bàn ér.

"We enjoy giving a vacant house a second life; transforming it from a dwelling with inflexible spaces into a place of active living," he continues.

The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu
The Roof House
© Boris Shiu

Sun Min says, "We want to offer models for a fitting transformation in the context of rural areas. We don't want to recall villa typologies that stay empty shells; they have become all but too present in rural areas outside Beijing."

The 240 square meter weekend home was realized on a 700.000 RMB construction budget and was completed in January of 2022 after a seven-month construction period.


The Roof House
Courtesy of guò bàn ér