Maison Jericho
Jericho House sits on a long and narrow plot, made up of of a succession of 'layers' starting with the front courtyard and 1900s main house, followed by the back garden and finally an old carriage house leading to an enclosed tiled terrace.
Following a first phase of rehabilitation of the main house in 2019, the project focused on the southern sequence. The brief is to refurbish the outbuilding for the family and friends to spend time together in (play area, bedroom and bathroom), build a connection between it and the main house, that addresses the garden, which will also be reconfigurated and integrated to the overall reflexion.
Two seven-meter long exposed concrete lintels span over the space in order to structure it; they connect the main house to the two transverse stone walls, that of the outbuilding and of the southern boundary. They soberly affirm the crossing of the plot, whose depth is thus revealed. These two elements rise above gloss green tiled facades that reflect the surrounding vegetation and pool, giving the greenery a greater depth, beyond the built facade. The intervention is intended to be both tangible and soundless.
Taking advantage of the height constraints imposed by urban planning, the project is a journey through the plot; from the house, one goes down to access the new corridor, which runs along the garden with views framing the vegetation, towards the outbuilding. A five-step wooden staircase allows access to it. Its historic elements have been preserved; a refurbished stone wall and a sanded down timber framework. A curved curtain runs underneath it, hiding a desk, technical elements and storage, but also guiding and redirecting the movement towards the pool and the garden.
In counterpoint, a concrete stage conceals the rough lower part of the existing stone wall. It forms a threshold and becomes a playful support of various uses. In summer, the trumpet flowers of the bignonia fill up the space of the garden.













