The YKAD House reinterprets traditional Turkish architecture by blending autonomous brick blocks, an organic roof structure, and innovative façade design to create a modern, energy-efficient family home.
The rooms of the Turkish house took their form alongside the development of the general concepts of community life. In the early houses the formation of the rooms was universally linked to their utilitarian functions but later modifications were made in the different regions of the country. The supporting structural elements derived their importance in direct proportion to their contribution to the function of the room. The supporting structure determines the dimensions and shape of the rooms as well as their interior – exterior relationships such as windows and doors and defines the interior arrangement. Thus the rooms took their shape as a result of the triple interrelation between the concept of the room, its elements and the structural system. So the interior arrangement indeed has a close relationship with the structural system of the whole building.
GAD Foundation works to positively affect practice and theory in architecture and urbanism with a focus on education, society and their intersection with architecture and urbanism.
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