Partially Submerged Homes

House JRv2's Rooms are Embedded Into a Berm

House JRv2, a newly built family home in Poznan, Poland, has an inverted design when compared to the average living space. Rather than a ground floor living area with an attached garage and rooms on the upper floors, House JRv2's garage makes up the top floor of the residence. The home achieves that seemingly illogical feat by partially embedding the living spaces into a natural berm that stretches across its property, allowing both the garage and the living areas to be at ground level depending on one's perspective.

One of the biggest benefits of the embedded living spaces in House JRv2 is privacy. Though the rooms have floor-to-ceiling windows, those windows look out onto the back of the home, while the front facing side is entirely obstructed by earth. Indeed, the home looks like little more than an infrastructural outpost from the front.
Trend Themes
1. Inverted Architecture - Builders can explore inverted designs by embedding living spaces into natural berms.
2. Privacy-focused Housing - Future-oriented builders can prioritize physical obstructions to create more private living spaces.
3. Ground-level Garages - Architects can experiment with integrating garages on the ground level rather than the traditional upper floors.
Industry Implications
1. Residential Construction - Builders can use inverted designs to create more attractive, customizable, and private housing options for homeowners.
2. Real Estate Development - Builders and developers can focus on privacy as a key selling point to differentiate properties and attract buyers.
3. Architecture and Design - Architects can use ground-level garages and embedded designs to create more innovative and sustainable structures with a lower carbon footprint.

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