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Locality: Hungary
Client: private
Area: 121,3 m²
Year: 2015 – 2019

A narrow dirt road zigzags up the hillside through the former orchards and vineyards. Today, in many places, only the long, narrow plots, a few wild fruit trees and the rambling, tiny cellars remind us of the once orderly agricultural landscape.

The “house on the vineyard” was built on such a long, relatively narrow, sloping lot for a family with four children.

House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary

We wanted the scale and shape of the building we were designing to be in keeping with the previous traditional construction of the area, but at the same time to meet the space requirements of the family of six, which was giving us quite a headache.

When we looked at the installation options, it was clear that much of the internal space would be below ground level. We wanted a functional solution that would not overstretch the frame.

House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
The planned oval recess connects the house to the site with a subtle gesture, there are no sudden movements or dramatic breaks. The rusty roofing changes and matures with its surroundings, separating the built elements from the unbuilt with a kind of naturalness, blending into the shape of the terrain. The arch, turning back on itself, embraces a piece of nature, a garden of herbs and flowers next to the house, to which the windows below open.
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
The bedrooms of the family members are positioned practically on the lower level, and the service rooms are located in the rear part of the house. Here is the entrance to the house, with the longitudinal strip of the hall separating the children’s area from the parents’ bedroom. The light entering the hall through the staircase clearly guides visitors to the upper floor, to the common spaces. It was important not to leave the internal circulation without natural light.
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary

The centre of family life, the compact living room with dining area and kitchen, is a traditional, white, house-shaped volume of about 50 m2 that rises above the ground at the side. Its ridge runs parallel to the slope and its gable overlooks the valley. Seen from a distance, it continues the line of small buildings that appear as tiny bright dots in the landscape.

House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary

The open roof makes the living room feel very spacious. A small gallery extends just above the dining room, which is actually a work area separated from the living room. It separates the space, but those who work here remain part of the family life.

The furniture is restrained, elements built in the living room and on the terrace complement the basic pieces carefully selected by the owner, such as the bench that runs along the front of the gable wall and is integrated into the fireplace, or the seating combined with terrace storage.

House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary

The negative log form, carved out of the archetypal mass, extends like a porch along the long side of the house, while the pergola, closely linked to it and covered with wild grapes, recalls the shady pergolas of former small gardens.

The huge window facing the hillside and the covered open spaces with large apertures, which are closely connected to the house, blur the lines between inside and outside, and the focus is clearly on the panorama.

House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
House on the Vineyard – Hungary
architecture: Csaba Balogh, Ágnes Deigner, Péter Sónicz, Levente Sirokai
Krisztina Ancza , Dávid Engert
structural engineering: Lajos Szabó, Gergő Csapody  |  DU-PLAN
mechanical engineering: Sándor Matits
electrical engineering: Attila Ernst
photography: Krisztina Ancza, Levente Sirokai