This small house is conceived as a singular architectural act. A steeply slanted roof, inclined between 45 and 50 degrees, defines the entire project—its structure, its silhouette, and its spatial logic. All domestic programs are gathered beneath this dominant plane, organized as a compact volume that unfolds under the roof rather than beside it.
The architecture is deliberately reduced to two fundamental elements: the roof and the space below. External expression is restrained, allowing the roof to stand alone as the project’s primary figure. Inside, variations in ceiling height, light, and enclosure emerge from the roof’s geometry, producing a nuanced spatial sequence within an otherwise minimal form.












