Green Design and Architecture

Artist’s workspace at home

Green Design and Architecture

Was taken in by this inviting set-up in My Little Art Place, an art school in Greenhills:

My Little Art Place


Owner Ryan says the purple floor matting is made of thin blue foam, and they just have the covers made.

My Little Art Place

The tables are low and close to the ground to make it easier for kids to draw and paint on them, but even I found the whole set-up so inviting for creative work and conversation!

Yay, more ideas now for my workspace.

🙂

A peek into green Antipolo

Green Communities Green Design and Architecture Sustainable Living

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Enjoyed looking at these lovely Antipolo places with so much heart! \":)\"They\’re from the album, \”This is the Beauty of our Neighborhood\”, by Kristine Garcia, who supplies organic produce via Emporium Antipolo.  Met her at a very successful raw food workshop at Leaf Kitchen last Saturday.

She says:

There are actually three Antipolo destinations shown in these photos: Vieux Chalet, Pinto Garden Museum, & LAYA. Also in this album, we intend to show more places that you ought to check out in Antipolo.

Emporium Antipolo is an organic shop which operates as a homestore: we supply organic food provisions, basic commodities and other local, eco-friendly & healthy stuff.
You can see in the photos above a bunch of green-minded people who are working (together with more green-minded pals) to make Antipolo an Art & Wellness destination.

Seeing pics like these makes me think back to when Antipolo was on my shortlist for where to set up my home…  The south and Tagaytay eventually won over Antipolo for the breezy weather, but wow, now that I\’m seeing lots of young artist-entrepreneurs in the Antipolo neighborhood, I\’m feeling a tinge of regret that I didn\’t give Antipolo a deeper look!  And just look at those mudhouses in Pinto — exactly how i want my home to feel like– alive, organic, free form, with real traces that it was made by people\’s hands… haaaay… \":)\"

Join Kristine in her green adventures through Emporium Antipolo\’s facebook photos, where each album feels like a storybook! I love how she makes going organic so charming–just like her physical workspace below, which also sometimes serves as her daughter Katie\’s playground:

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Made with so much love. 🙂

Moodboard: Living-dining-kitchen

Green Design and Architecture

I am a big fan of the open plan living-dining-kitchen and have been finding ways to really make it work for my small house (footprint is just about 30 square meters!).

Here\’s the first 3D mock up of the ground floor I got from my architect:
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Seeing it in 3D gives a sense of how tight the space really is: the sliding doors are the border of the house; the peach walls are the perimeter fence– that area at the back will be gardened and used as a patio/outdoor room.

There won\’t be dividing walls on the ground floor– I want people to see the garden from the main door. I\’ve asked to flip the layout to have the kitchen and dining in one go, making the space more streamlined:
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Everything is movable (for some reason I\’ve always found rearranging furniture therapeutic), so these areas are likely to flip more in the future, but here\’s the general feel I hope to create for the ground floor:
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I love love love the colors in this hotel lobby sofa:
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I don\’t know how I\’ll get to pull this off, but it will happen, one way or another! 🙂

I also want to allocate an area for painting, as in this studio of Mexican artist, Diego Rivera:
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A small corner would do, but maybe it\’ll have to be in the patio area…

Images are from dwell.com and latimes.com.

Moodboard: Front Porch

Green Design and Architecture

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I wanted the front area of my house to be a spare carport-porch, but was advised this isn\’t practical as my lot is elevated or gradient from the ground to the hip level.

Considering my lot is so small, I want to make every space count. If I don\’t find a way to make this 12-square meter frontage functional (maybe by leveling it), I just have to concede it as a purely cosmetic space. Boo.

For sure I want the front to look clean, though, so no gate, and instead of concrete flooring, I hope it can have horizontal lines of grass and pebbles/concrete for the carport, and just ground cover (possibly mani) for the landscaped area:
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My Nuvali moodboard

My Nuvali Home

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Got this inspiring collage from a great interior designer and one of my bestest friends, Claudine. She called it a moodboard, which I\’m assuming is design lingo for something that sets the design aesthetics (mood!) of a house.

Great way to brainstorm and refresh one\’s design palette, don\’t you think?

I\’ve started organizing individual moodboards for each of the rooms/areas for my house (listed below).  Will share them when ready. 🙂

GROUND FLOOR

  • garage and front porch
  • open plan kitchen-living-dining
  • kitchen details
  • dining room details
  • living room details
  • garden
  • screened patio
  • powder room

SECOND FLOOR

  • master\’s bedroom
  • master\’s bathroom
  • walk-in closet
  • spare bedroom
  • hallway

OTHERS

  • roofdeck
  • rooftop garden
  • utility area
  • windows
  • flooring

Modern and mexican – do they go together?

Green Design and Architecture

Visited my friend Crisi’s house in Ponderosa recently, and really decided that by hook or by crook I will have those vibrant Mexican colors infused into my supposedly modern contemporary home!

Look at these tiled staircases, so warm and homey:

Crisi suggested I just have concrete stairs made with wooden planks on top, then stencil and paint the vertical side with latex paint. Sounds like a plan 🙂

Other tile patterns:

(Image from istockphoto)

Green Architecture Advocacy Philippines is here to help!

Green Design and Architecture

I found out by chance last Sunday that Green Architecture Advocacy Philippines holds office just here in Ortigas/Pasig– I was meeting a friend at Kopi Tiam in Green Valley Country Club along C-5 and saw that green logo right before the entrance to the bowling alley. 😛

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The guard was kind enough to let me know that they\’re open Mondays to Saturdays from 10am-7pm.  Hope I can drop by for a visit soon.

Also checked the Green Architecture Advocacy Philippines facebook page. They hold monthly lectures on anything and everything green at Wilcon Builder\’s Centre, C-5, which is also right here in my backyard!  I really have no excuse not to be attending these!

Last month\’s lecture was on small-scale renewable energy sources in the Philippines… If I had been more diligent in my research, I would\’ve found out about it sooner…

The next one will tackle \”Green Buildings: Operations and Maintenance\” on November 24, 2010 from 5-9pm.  Too bad I\’ll be out of town, but do hope some of you can make it.  Am sure it will be interesting not just for the learning, but also for the new \”green\” friends you\’ll get to make. 🙂

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Tropical alternative to sun rooms?

Green Design and Architecture

Who wouldn\’t want something like this at home?

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(Image from RemodelingLocal.com)

Lots of light coming in, just happiness all around… it\’s like having a permanent sunflower for a living space.

I\’ve been trying to come up with a tropical version of these glassed sun rooms for the back part of my Nuvali house, given two additional constraints:

  • must let the air in without having to open windows
  • must use a cheaper material than glass

Have explored various roofing and window options, but the best I\’ve come up with it this: opaque roofing (similar to garage/carport roofing, still undecided on the material) with screened grills at the tips that enclose the whole area and keep the bugs out.

Visited a friend\’s home in Paranaque last Saturday and was surprised to see that her patio uses this exact set-up!

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She said they eventually put plywood on top of the trellis to keep the sun out.  The original clear roofing got lots of light in, but it also made the patio too warm on some days.

Interesting!  Definitely much cheaper than using wraparound glass windows and doors, and the screened ends will make sure I get the tropical breeze in.

What do you think? 🙂

Passive cooling house tips for tropical climates

Green Design and Architecture

Here\’s a very handy fact sheet made by the Australian government, that \”examines ways to design and modify homes to achieve summer comfort through passive cooling\”. It lists the following climate-specific design principles we should take note of in coming up with our Nuvali home designs:

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(Image from YourHome.gov.au)

In high humid (tropical) climates:

  • High humidity levels limit the body’s ability to lose heat by evaporation of perspiration.
  • Sleeping comfort is a significant issue – especially during periods of high humidity.
  • Design eaves and shading to permanently exclude solar access to rooms. [See: 4.4 Shading]
  • Consider shading the whole building with a fly roof. [See: 4.4 Shading]
  • Maximise shaded external wall areas and exposure to (and funneling of) cooling breezes through the building.
  • Use single room depths where possible with maximum shaded openings to enhance cross ventilation and heat removal.
  • Design unobstructed cross ventilation paths.
  • Provide hot air ventilation at ceiling level for all rooms with spinnaways, shaded opening clerestorey windows or ridge vents.
  • Shade outdoor areas around the house with planting and shade structures to lower ground temperatures.
  • Use insulation solutions that minimise heat gain during the day and maximise heat loss at night. Advanced reflective insulation systems and reflective air spaces can be effective.
    [See: 4.8 Insulation Installation]
  • Choose windows with maximum opening areas (louvres or casement) and avoid fixed glass panels.
  • Include ceiling fans to create air movement during still periods.
  • Consider using whole of house fans with smart switching to draw cooler outside air into the house at night when there is no breeze.
  • Use low thermal mass construction generally. (Note: high mass construction can be beneficial in innovative, well considered design solutions).
  • Use planting design to funnel cooling breezes and filter strong winds. (Appropriate in all cooling climates).

Read more on YourHome.gov.au.  Found on Sustainable Living Philippines (which is also a good page to bookmark).

The banggerahan from lola’s kitchen

Green Design and Architecture
Nuvali house drawings


My parents and I always talk fondly of my grandmother’s kitchen in Bicol, which was small but no less efficient! Its key feature was the banggerahan, an open-air shelf or balcony for hanging plates and glasses to dry.

Lola Chedeng made good use of her banggerahan, which I learned is also called pinggahan (it’s meant to house plates or pinggan after all!).  In her tiny U-shaped kitchen, floor space was minimal but it also made everything within reach.  One minute you’re facing the sink; turn to your left and voila, there’s the range.  Turn once more to your left and there’s the ever reliable banggerahan, which was also used for planters for growing herbs.

From that kitchen came out many meals that made my dad, aunt and uncle what they are today– strong, healthy and well-fed with love.

I hope to integrate a simple banggerahan into my Nuvali home, so I asked my dad to make an updated drawing (shown above).  I want it to house not just my plates, glasses, cutlery and potted herbs, but also all the fresh fruits and veggies I don’t want (nor need) to store in the refrigerator.  Underneath maybe I can put my compost pit.

Was also happy to read on PinoyDreamHouseToday.com about Architect Bobby Manosa also incorporating this traditional kitchen feature into his home projects.  Author Jun Sanchez was kind enough to indulge me and share a pic of Manosa’s very sleek banggerahan (look for the link in the comments section).

Oh yet again, so exciting!  So many design ideas, have to work harder to stay true to my design thrust of keeping it simple.   For now though, kudos to the banggerahan and all the other back-to-basics lessons we can learn from our grandparents!

Open-concept kitchen, living and dining

Green Design and Architecture

I love space and flow and seamlessness.

I notice it in my art (I never think a work is finished), writing (I prefer ellipses to periods), even relationships (I find it almost impossible to compartmentalize or be a different person to each of my social circles–colleagues, family, sports friends, etc.).

Always, there\’s one big flow, all-encompassing, all-embracing.

Naturally this also comes into play in designing my dream home.

One of the ideas I would love to have in my house is the open-concept living-dining-kitchen area, like in this modern home in Sao Paulo, Brazil:

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The house was designed by architect Marcio Kogan, whose film making background shows in his clever use of planes:

By keeping the front and back gardens at the same elevation as the living area, Kogan created one giant living space. A large overhang means that even on a rainy day, the Cósers can live practically without walls.