The Ministry of Artistic Affairs
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
We don't discuss architecture too often on this blog but every now and then we come across something that just has to be shared. This house near Vilnius, Lithuania, offers a perfectly balanced combination of old and new, history and modern, classic and avant garde. It was designed by one of our favorite architecture firms, G. Natkevicius & Partners.





Located by in the valley of river Vilnia that gave the city its name, the park and the city have a rich history with the oldest written records dating back to 1323. The Puckoriu escarpment in the park has rare rock formations from the Ice Age. A large munitions factory on the site dates back to the 17th century.

It seems that in Vilnius private residents can buy pieces of such storied land, and when the current owner of the site - a banker and collector of antique books - bought it, a single bright-yellow building stood on it. On further examination, the owners found out that the building was part of the cannon foundry and it was built of valuable, historic Vilnius-made bricks.

The yellow house itself was not as big as the four-member family wanted their home to be, so they decided to build their new home of glass and erect it around the historic brick house. The exposed brick adds a tactile sexy feel and softens the potentially cold atmosphere of the glass structure. A sensuous curved opening, cut for the staircase that is outside the brick house, adds another focal point that works beautifully with the square elements around it.





Special thanks to The Cool Hunter.