Life-Stages House

A former two-family home reimagined with modular floor plans

A four-story villa overlooking Lake Glambeck in Neustrelitz, the former royal residence, sits just an hour from Berlin. Following its renovation, architect Christian Peters—grandson of the original builder—reimagined the 1928 structure as a Life-Phase House. The concept is elegantly simple: its modular floor plan allows the three living areas to adapt fluidly to residents' changing needs without requiring major structural interventions. As life circumstances shift, so can the configuration of this generously proportioned former two-family home.

The design strategy centers on accessing distinct apartments through two separate entries. Ground-floor residents enter directly from the front, while those in the basement and upper floors use the western side staircase. This flexible layout allows for numerous configurations—a larger ground-floor room can be split into two smaller units, or the attic studio can become two rooms with a full bath. When the staircases are consolidated and the former interior ground-floor entrance reopened, the entire home becomes seamlessly connected. This adaptability makes the villa suitable for a multigenerational family, a collective living arrangement, or up to three independent residential units. The crown jewel is the maisonette attic apartment—approximately 160 m² of light-filled space with three to four generously proportioned bedrooms, a modern bathroom, a kitchen-diner, a lake-facing balcony, and a luminous attic living area. The currently leased ground floor spans about 104 m² and features three to four period-detailed rooms, a separate kitchen-diner, and a protected loggia overlooking the lake. The basement's lakeside guest quarters—approximately 56 m² of ground-level living space—encompasses two to three rooms and a garden terrace. The ability to lease individual units unlocks financial flexibility, especially when adult children relocate for studies. The space equally accommodates home offices or professional practices. "What makes this historic property exceptional," architect Christian Peters notes, "is how its floor plans work together with the multiple building entrances. The layouts themselves are remarkably adaptable to virtually any living requirement."

www.steht-ein-haus-am-see.de

Photography:
Philipp Pechta
www.phideomedia.de

(Published in CUBE Berlin 02|24)

Architecture:
Christian Peters
www.steht-ein-haus-am-see.de

Tile Work:
Ueckert Tiling & Construction
Phone: 03981-203067

Painting:
Steffen Illguth Painting
Phone: 03981-4530459

Carpentry:
Wilhelm Gehrs Carpentry
Phone: 039825-20425

Heating & Plumbing:
Hauke Runge
www.hauke-runge.de

Electrical:
Volt Electric
www.volt.de

Nothing found.

Medical Milestone

State-of-the-art research facility houses Charité's new translational center

Alpine heritage, with an urban twist

A South Tyrolean theme for a brand store

Art in the Office

A textile installation brings architecture, nature and thought into a sensory dialogue

Dynamic and green

A transport company in Ratingen has been granted planning permission for a large-scale extension

Nothing found.

02_Cube_PRA_Thermohaus-Guben_15_700pixel

Thermal house with climate envelope

Three Goals, One Solution: Preserve the Existing Structure, Double the Space, Achieve Energy Efficiency

2020_MSA_Wooden House in Brandenburg_09-Simon-Menges_21-06_HiRes_23_41_700pixel

Black Diamond Effect

Multi-Generational Timber Residence with Carbonized Façade in Brandenburg

Color fuels creativity

A former popcorn factory transforms into a creative architectural studio

IMAG0539_15_700pixel

Diverse garden landscape

Grasgrau and Atelier Loidl worked with the owners to develop a concept for a modern cottage garden with lots of roses and hydrangeas in the...

BRING-BERLIN-HOME-dining-scene-with-PROPELLER-lampshade_15_700pixel

Where Mathematics Meets Nature

Fundamental Berlin creates furniture, lighting, and ceramic collections.

WALD_Winkelmeier_IMG_7074-Copy_19_700pixel

Learning in the Forest

Trees. Forests. Climate. – An Interactive Exhibition in Grunewald