A House with Bold Design Statements
A Single-Family Home That Embraces Nature
The site offered ideal conditions for this new home: a sloping plot on a quiet, traffic-calmed road, surrounded on three sides by trees and open fields. Equally compelling were the homeowners' vision—a distinctly modern design with a clean-lined flat roof. They wanted design and function to work in harmony, with an open-plan living space that unified dining and cooking areas. This more "public" living zone, welcoming to guests yet unpretentious, contrasted with the private sanctuary upstairs, featuring a luxurious en-suite bathroom. Practical everyday considerations informed the design just as much as the desire to celebrate the natural landscape beyond the walls.
Architect Linda Jochheim of Hilker + Jochheim took her cue from the property's topography and western-facing garden, translating the clients' vision into a refined architectural language of timeless modernism. The pristine white plaster façade echoes surrounding structures while reinforcing the home's pure geometric form. To maximize usable space on the sloped terrain, the ground floor adopts an L-shaped plan, with the kitchen and dining area flowing seamlessly, and the living room anchoring the corner. This layout creates a naturally sheltered terrace zone. Offset volumes extend the design language to covered outdoor spaces and upper-level roof terraces accessible from multiple rooms. While the house opens generously toward the garden—with expansive floor-to-ceiling glazed walls framing meadows and fields—the street-facing south elevation reveals an introverted character. Every opening is precisely calibrated to the sun's path: minimal south-facing glazing minimizes summer heat gain, while expansive north and west-facing windows flood the interior with light. Motorized roller blinds maintain comfortable indoor temperatures year-round without mechanical intervention. Inside, minimalist interiors mirror the façade's disciplined aesthetic. A restrained palette of materials is punctuated by refined concrete accents—the sculptural staircase, select wall planes, and concrete-look tiles in the bathroom. Custom-fitted cabinetry integrated into the staircase maximizes storage without compromising circulation. This cool architectural language finds its warmth in natural oak flooring that grounds the entire composition.
The home's defining gesture is its seamless integration of the surrounding landscape—felt immediately upon entry. The house dissolves into its garden, with trees and fields continuously reflected in the window planes, glass surfaces, and mirrored cabinet doors. Even seated at the dining table with your back turned, the landscape reappears via reflection in the staircase glazing. Subtle downlighting preserves this delicate indoor-outdoor dialogue without visual intrusion. The 140 m² of living space achieves remarkable efficiency through minimized circulation areas and thoughtful program placement—including a utility room directly linked to the garage. Heating is provided by a high-efficiency fuel cell system, completing the home's commitment to intelligent design.
(Published in CUBE Ruhrgebiet 03|20)