Aleksey Ivanov Studio "Arkhstroydesign ASD" became the winner of the Fifth Open Contest organized by Russian Housing Development Foundation for the best low-rise energy-efficient housing project of economy class.
About the project that was awarded
the main award of the contest, Archi.ru is talking to architect Aleksey Ivanov.
"We participated in the RHDF contest for
the third time around, and it seems to us that we were finally able to come up
with the formula of the perfect economy housing. In the previous years, we were
looking to offer, within the framework of this contest, some new and
groundbreaking housing models - both from the planning and from the stylistic
standpoint - that is, until we finally recognized that these experiments are
not really compatible with the idea of economy as such, and, at the end of the
day, are not something that the end consumer of such housing is after. This
year we placed our bets on the simplicity and practicability of our solutions -
and, as the results of the contest prove, we did the right thing.
"Arkhstroydesign ASD" not only got the Grand Prix of the contest but
also won the first prize in the nomination "Individual Residential
House", and in the other two nominations - "Apartment House" and
"Block Residential House" - we won "silver". 
Individual residential house
Our individual residential house sports the
traditional gable roof whose crest we shift considerably off-center in respect
to the central axis. This technique makes the silhouette if our cottages more
dramatic. And, while this shift has virtually no effect on the image of the
roof, the image of the side facades is fully conditioned by these tectonics:
the narrow wooden insert splits the fronton into two halves that exist
independently from one another. On the combination of these two main materials
- white stucco and natural wood - the image of this house is based: by using
the wooden panels, we visually fracture the facades, preventing them from
looking too monolith. This same task is performed by the window openings that
we deliberately make different-sized (using the window frames of the standard
size, of course), as well as by the niches of the entrance porch and the
spacious veranda at the back side of the house. As for the veranda roof, we
propose to execute it from semi-transparent polycarbonate - an insert of this
material is cut into the slope of the roof at an angle of its own which makes
the silhouette of the building look still a little more sophisticated and even
piquant. 
Individual residential house
The strong point of our project (and this was
unanimously noted by the judging panel) is the planning that we looked to make
as rational and cost-efficient as possible. On the territory of a little more
than 100 square meters we were able to place 3 bedrooms, a large drawing/dining
room, and a sufficient number of closets and bathrooms. One of the main
features of the projects is the fact that only the outer walls perform the
bearing function, so, should this be necessary, the apartment owners will be
able to adjust the partitions to their liking. 
Individual residential house. Layouts
The apartment house and the townhouses are in
fact modifications of the cottage archetype. In fact, we "put
together" the block housing of the same houses, cutting their facades a
little and making the shape of the roof a little more complex. The crucial
point for us here was spacing the entrances out to each if the sections - the
houses are grouped into blocks in such a way that the neighbors do not need to
be constantly bumping into one another before the doors - instead, they will
see each other from a distance. Each of our townhouses has a terrace of its own
- but here we did not have to make a special awning for it; the terrace is
integrated into the main volume. 
Townhouse
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Townhouse Yet more complex looks each of the structures of
the three-story apartment house. Its color palette is also based on the white
and light wooden hue but here we use the panels to make more sophisticated
compositions that allow us to bring variety into elongated facades. Their
plastic is enriched by the stairwells that stand out from the main volume and
are crowned by a gable roof with its crest shifted noticeably off-center. 
Apartment building
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Individual residential buildings In other words, out of a few simple and
clear-cut ingredients, we get sunlit, reasonably penetrable volumes that sport,
as we hope, a self-sufficient appearance that also looks great when multiplied
manifold. Oh, and by the way, we, at our own initiative, developed master plans
of settlements consisting of the houses of all the three types - we wanted to
make absolutely sure that the pieces of housing that we developed can live at
absolute peace with one another. We tried to turn such multi format housing
into a comfortable "habitat" with the help of the radial and circular
layout of the master plan where the central public territory is not rigidly
fixed but smoothly transitions to privately-owned houses.
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