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With rich photography and insightful commentary, this Thai architecture and interior design book showcases some of the finest modern masterpieces in Southeast Asia. A tremendous body of sophisticated and sensitively designed architectural work has been produced in Thailand in the first decade of the 21st century. The 25 houses in The Modern Thai House illustrate the radical new ideas coming from a dynamic younger generation of architects who are producing work comparable with and sometimes even surpassing the very best architecture in the world. Most of these architects were trained in the U.S. or U.K. and reflect not only American and European sensibilities but also affinities with their contemporaries in Asia —including Japan, China, Singapore, and Bali—all hotbeds for innovation in modern design. The houses in this book are readily accessible from Bangkok, Phuket, and Chiangmai. They reflect a wide variety of concerns and solutions, such as: sustainability; responses to climate; strategies for cooling with minimal electricity; openness versus security in a large metropolis such as Bangkok; cultural sensitivity and responsiveness, as evidenced in a "three-generation house," built for a society in which the extended family is still prevalent; and cultural memory, as in the use of elements such as pilings, verandahs, and steeply pitched roofs with large overhangs that echo traditional Thai designs. Nurtured by an increasingly knowledgeable and wealthy clientele, modern architecture in Thailand is emerging with a variety of innovative architectural expressions.
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6 of the 25 houses featured in this book are “three-generation homes” – a concept largely unknown in modern Western culture, but an enduring concept in Thailand (and many parts of Asia) for economic and cultural reasons.
Modern multigenerational cohabitation presents a number of design challenges: spectrums of privacy needs, independence, encountering/gathering, and family needs changing over time, etc. I enjoyed the spread of modern solutions from these architects/clients who designed with extended family and aging in mind.
For reference, the 6 houses, and their architects:
1. The Three Parallel House (Kanika Ratanapridakul)
2. Baan Taab 1 (Srisak Phattanawasin)
3. The Yellow Hole House (Plankrich Architects)
4. The Komkrit House (Boonlert Hemvijitraphan)
5. The Harirak House (Bundit Kanisthakhon)
6. Laemsingh Villa No. 1 (Ernesto Bedmar)
Other three-generation houses mentioned (but not visually featured) were Baan Ton Son by Prapapat and Theeraphon Niyom, and House U3 by Kanika Ratanapridakul.
The book also features a few houses that were designed in response to climate change, e.g. passive house strategies for cooling with minimal electricity.
Broadly, though: a nice coffee table book. Pretty photography. Includes floor plans. An easy leisure read.