An Architect Couple Trade Size for Sustainability in Their Family’s Amsterdam Home

Building with wood was a requirement by the city, but it was their decision to build smaller—and smarter—for the sake of efficiency.

Not your usual soundtrack to a suburban morning: the soft clucking of chickens in their coop below your bedroom window. But for Farah Agarwal and Arjen Aarnoudse, cofounders of architecture firm The Way We Build, it is one of the joys of living in the house they designed for themselves and their two children on a corner lot in the Dutch town of Driemond, on the outer edge of Amsterdam.

By making their new home in a suburb of Amsterdam much smaller than the maximum allowed, architects Arjen Aarnoudse and Farah Agarwal managed their energy needs while increasing their outdoor space.

By making their new home in a suburb of Amsterdam much smaller than the maximum allowed, architects Arjen Aarnoudse and Farah Agarwal managed their energy needs while increasing their outdoor space.  

Photo by Tim Van de Velde

 "It is every architect’s dream to design and build their own home," says Arjen, explaining how leaving the city center allowed them to fulfill theirs. But in doing so they accepted another challenge: to support the municipality’s sustainability agenda. Inspired by the aesthetic mandate that every new home in the neighborhood have a facade made of wood, Arjen and Farah took things further, doing their utmost to make the house as green as possible.

They built it entirely of wood and decided to make it much smaller—1,453 square feet, as opposed to the 2,400 their permit allowed. Limiting the size freed room in the budget for sustainability measures, helped keep energy costs manageable, and provided space for a yard.

Photo by Tim Van de Velde

The couple created a compact, 33-by- 33-foot two-level plan, which they framed in timber. On the first level, ceiling beams made of superstrong laminated veneer lumber stretch from wall to wall, allowing for an open interior around a central, freestanding box. Constructed of prepainted, green, medium-density fiberboard (MDF) the box contains a full bath, the kitchen, storage, a Murphy bed for guests, and stairs leading to bedrooms on the second level. The kids love to run around the space and sometimes play hide-and-seek there. On the south side of the house, an entire wall of floor-to-ceiling glass sliders leads to a patio and gardens.

Inside, the living areas flow around a green box that contains the kitchen and a full bath.

Inside, the living areas flow around a green box that contains the kitchen and a full bath.

Photo by Tim Van de Velde

See the full story on Dwell.com: An Architect Couple Trade Size for Sustainability in Their Family’s Amsterdam Home
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