A Clear Statement
This family home frames views that connect the interior to the surrounding landscape.
This family home sits at the edge of a typical suburban development in a Lower Saxony town. While the area lacks cohesive urban planning, the property compensates with its striking location and sweeping views across a landscape defined by open fields and forests. Here, the Axel Nieberg studio in Hanover has crafted an unmistakable architectural gesture—a single-family home rendered entirely in exposed concrete. The building's materiality and purity stand apart in this suburban context. Every design decision amplifies the visual connection to the landscape. A generous floor-to-ceiling window above the entrance frames expansive vistas to the horizon, while horizontal bands of glazing on the upper floor deliver panoramic countryside views from all angles, complete with the shifting drama of passing clouds.
The development's strict requirement for pitched roofs shaped the two-storey section into an inverted hipped roof in exposed concrete—cleverly hidden from view by raised parapet walls. Inside, the inward-sloping roof becomes a dramatic spatial experience within the double-height entry hall. The single-storey wing received a concrete gable roof, similarly screened by parapets. Inside, these varied roof geometries create unexpected spatial drama. The exposed concrete follows a precise grid of formwork and anchor holes, tinted a warm brown that prevents the typical cold appearance of raw concrete. This horizontal grid subtly reinforces the upper-floor window bands. Recessed windows function as sharp incisions, their depth casting compelling shadow patterns across the facades. To the northwest, the terrain rises gently—solved with exposed concrete retaining walls that level the outdoor living area while shielding the garden from neighboring views and establishing genuine privacy. Sunken atriums adjacent to interior spaces add further intimate refuge. A sculptural timber element anchors the northwest corner, providing a shaded outdoor room on the ground floor and a dramatic rooftop terrace above—perfectly positioned to capture low-angle evening light sweeping across the countryside.
The entry sequence centers on a soaring hall flooded by oversized windows. The ground floor unfolds as a flowing open plan—living, dining, and kitchen spaces connected without interruption—while an adjoining single-storey wing provides the parents' private retreat. A sculptural concrete stair ascends to the upper floor, where a gallery reveals breathtaking countryside panoramas. The children occupy their own dedicated zone above. Throughout the home, every interior space frames unexpected views—whether toward the landscape or into the atriums—creating a kaleidoscope of sightlines that shift with your vantage point. Restrained material choices—primarily concrete—impart a serene quality to all rooms. Consistent warm lighting reinforces this intimate atmosphere. Downlights sit flush within the concrete ceiling to eliminate glare entirely. At dusk, strategically placed uplighting brings the atrium trees softly into focus.
Living space: 225 m²
Plot size: 630 m²
Construction period: 20 months
Construction method: Solid masonry
Energy concept: Gas condensing boiler with solar thermal and photovoltaic systems
Photography Credits:
Axel Nieberg
(Published in CUBE Hamburg 01|24)