A sculpted shell coated with winding interior clay plaster, which resembles the cave in this farm in Tamil Nadu, India, which was completed by local Earthscape Studio.
The Earthscape Studio house, called The Wild House, which is called The Wild House, is designed to supplement its green location circulating between the mountains and a forest near the city of Mettupalayam.
It has a contemporary organic form with natural finishes, including a type of lime plaster known as Thapipi, which restores the structural Ferrocement shell of the house.

“We started our design with a focus on 25 percent on construction and 75 percent on the ground,” the lead architect Petchimuthu Kennedy told Dezeen.
“The reason behind this structure is to avoid columns and symptoms, which makes a self-written structure flowing into a liquid-called” fold structure. “
The wild house plan is flying around a central courtyard designed of trees wrapped by a high arched corridor, which can be accessed through a tunnel -like opening to the north.

Organizes the edges of this central corridor in the shape of a Doughnut are the bar, the living area and two bedrooms found in swollen protrusions, ventilation by cotton -like holes that arise from the roof of the house.
Partially mired in the ground, windows similar to the letters of the letters that were framing with mask -like holes are available on both the surrounding landscapes and the central courtyard, which are reached through large glass doors.

“The farm folds with surprises for every space, which brings curiosity around the spaces,” Kennedy explained.
“These folds and curves feel like a cave to give a wild experience. Windows are open to a Silvan view from the outside of the basement to bring cold air to space,” he added.
While the house is externally wrapped in the fixed plaster, inside it is lined with a variety more than the clay plaster, the Lyme Lyme floors are completed to complete its atmosphere similar to the cave.
All of the family and furniture The Wild House were specially made to suit the organic shapes of the building, and the use of scrap wood and local stone.

Kennedy said: “All furniture is integrated, according to the space,” Kennedy said. He added: “The bed, pillows and fabrics are allocated according to its own shape and play, which creates a luxurious feeling.”
“With dirt architecture, more important than materials are craftsmen – we choose the materials based on local craftsmen who are experts in local technologies and materials.”

The Earthscape studio in Bangalore often benefits from local materials for its designs inspired by nature.
Previous projects of this practice include a home in Anaikatti wrapped in the Gabion wall full of local stones and a domain house in Kerala state covered with recycled tiles.
Photography by Studio IKSHA.
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