Living
Between Light and Shadow
Built form is conceived as entrapped
space and vertical and horizontal planes are composed to enclose and capture
space. Corners of this spatial envelope have been broken in many places to
isolate and distinguish the vertical planes and one reads or is rather illussioned
of a series of free standing walls. In a house designed by Madumali for her own
family, space is trapped and many of the vertical planes extend beyond, to the
landscape which in return ties it splendidly with its surroundings.
In this house, light was of the
essence. Many openings were made for the natural light to wash over planes,
transforming the interior built form into abstract art that changes throughout
the day. Interior furnishings are kept to a minimum so as not to distract one
from this abstract. Indeed, it is a house of light and shadow.
The house encloses a large mango tree
and hugs the natural terrain. The earth cuts were reduced to only obtaining
level floors for the interior space and the house eventually is of many varying
levels.
Built for a family of four; husband and
wife architects and specially centered on the two children, this is a house that
takes children’s safety serious. A long ramp was put in instead of steps
between the mid landing and the dining converting an ordinary place of access
into a place that brings screams of joy.
The middle court yard, holding the
mango tree, eventually is going to be a fully flooded pool when the kids grow
up, but is now often used as a sandpit where children play within the safety of
the house.
The entirely of the roof top has been
turned into a garden, giving back the Nature the space taken up for building
the house. Because of the proximity to the paddy fields and the courtyard
within, with the mango tree in it, the wildlife does not recognize a separation
between the built and the unbuilt.
The ultramarine painted angular
elemental wall and the ramp with it creates a wind tunnel and a suction effect
cooling the interiors at all times. Coming from the harshness of the midday
sun, the interiors are a cool heaven with large whitewashed cubic volumes with
shadows playing on them. The physiological feeling is like getting under the
large shady tree, but the man made trapped space reminds one where he is. To borrow a phrase from Louis Khan who aptly
put it, this house shows that ‘sunshine does not know what it is until it hit
the walls’.
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Principal Architect Archt. Madumali Sumanadasa, A.I.A.(S.L).,
Structural Engineer Eng. Padma Guneratne
Contractor Sunil Labour Contractor
Location Battaramulla
Period of construction April 2005 to March 2006
Total area of building 2,230 SqFt
Madumali Sumanadasa 2013 February
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