nicolas.boullosa:
patrick partouche
nicolas.boullosa:
maison à conteneurs, conçue par l'architecte pour lui et sa famille
nicolas.boullosa:
patrick partouche
nicolas.boullosa:
20 years ago, partouche thought greenhouses and shipping containers where a good building option for affordable housing
nicolas.boullosa:
patrick partouche
nicolas.boullosa:
chambre d'étude pour les enfants
nicolas.boullosa:
gigantic polivalent space
nicolas.boullosa:
during the long and rainy winters, this house retains heat from sun radiation (even when it's not that sunny)
nicolas.boullosa:
light and space are abundant in this affordable house
nicolas.boullosa:
bedrooms are upstairs (à l'étage)
nicolas.boullosa:
integration
nicolas.boullosa:
the greenhouses include a manual mechanism to open the roof, allowing cross ventilation through the building areas
nicolas.boullosa:
2 greenhouses and 3 shipping containers make the main space
nicolas.boullosa:
the house is outside lille in an affordable industrial area
nicolas.boullosa:
light
nicolas.boullosa:
oil barrels become the structure of a generous design table
nicolas.boullosa:
partouche explains his devotion for modern design and experimentation
nicolas.boullosa:
architect patrick partouche
nicolas.boullosa:
translucent
nicolas.boullosa:
bookshelves
nicolas.boullosa:
partouche built the house for himself and his family, for a total cost under 100,000 euros
nicolas.boullosa:
the "front yard" living area includes a small container as working shed & kids studio
nicolas.boullosa:
faircompanies interviews patrick partouche
nicolas.boullosa:
multiuse area (work, study, family gatherings, living room)
nicolas.boullosa:
partouche designed and built his "maison à conteneurs" 2 decades ago, long before the current trend
nicolas.boullosa:
the chosen industrial elements are functional and affordable
nicolas.boullosa:
2 green houses on each side of a central container area
nicolas.boullosa:
the house uses unexpensive industrial prefab buildings