By Marina Correa
Photography: Riyaz Quraishi
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Standing out for its
striking façade, this award-winning ‘twin sloped roof’ bungalow is primarily
designed to adapt the home to Bahrain’s harsh climate...
Overcoming their biggest
challenge of integrating the surroundings with a weather-proof, contemporary
glass design, architects Riyaz and Simeen Quraishi of Hyderabad-based design firm Moriq, have responded to the
desire for a contemporary home (with lots of glass) insulated from the
sweltering summers and damp winters. Deservedly so, the home in Hamala, Bahrain
has, a few days back, won them the ‘Glass
House’ category award at The International Design and Architecture Awards 2014.
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The spacious 12,700 sq. ft.
bungalow standing on a 4,308 sq. yard plot shows a dramatic hierarchy of level
play: bedrooms feature on the upper level; living areas on ground level; two
extra bedrooms along with a gym and a temperature-controlled swimming pool are tucked
in mid-cellar, while the home theatre sits within the cellar. Erected on stilts
over the pool, the master bedroom enjoys a unique position.
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“We planned to submerge
part of the house to escape the summer heat, while integrating the landscape
with various changing levels on the inside,” says Simeen.
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Diligently mapping proportions, service areas are huddled at the centre, while the living and bedrooms line the periphery of the home enjoying natural light, ventilation and vantage views. The glass walls and windows suffuse the lower levels with light and become the quintessential connection to the outside.
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Interestingly, use of a
similar colour and a restricted material palette for the interior and exterior further
strengthens the indoor-outdoor visual connect. For instance, the wooden ceiling
in the interiors is the same shade as the sandstone used for cladding the facade.
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Also, the façade bearing
the twin sloped roofs confers varying heights and dimensions to the interiors such
as the awe-inspiring triple height dining room; thus evoking earnestness on both
the sides. Completing the axial relationship is a long narrow water body that
traverses along the north-south span of the bungalow, culminating into a
snail-like waterfall at the northern end; mimicking the juxtaposition of changing
levels in the outdoor landscaping as well; truly unifying the design.
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