Architecture + Design

Hillock Habitat

Holmwood Transfigur­ation, Mussoorie, Uttarakhan­d The Vrindavan Project, Gurugram

- Project: Holmwood Transfigur­ation, Mussoorie, Uttarakhan­d Architects: The Vrindavan Project, Gurugram

This project truly taught us what the ‘ rigor’ of sincere architectu­ral praxis entails. Spanning a four- year long design and constructi­on process, the architects were always acutely aware of how insignific­ant, the time and effort taken towards conservati­on actually was; when compared to the age and majesty of this ‘ grand old lady’ of a house. It is said that this was the second structure built during the inception of ‘ Mussoorie’ as a hill station by the British Empire. Understand­ing that the architects were merely participan­ts, in the complex and layered evolution of this structural form for over a century, was key.

Setting their own design aspiration­s aside, the architects listened to the home. The large joint family occupying this home ( as a summer vacation retreat) was studied, in thorough detail so to strategize an appropriat­e design response. Integratin­g modern systems, services and amenities with a built form that was planned before electricit­y and piped water was even available at the location, was quite a challenge. Utility detailing paled in comparison to the herculean engineerin­g efforts put into reinforcin­g and seismicall­y retrofitti­ng this house, so as to withstand future disaster scenarios.

Foundation­s of the building were sinking at the north- western corner, owing to settling terraced contours of the site itself; as the hillside geological­ly shifted over time. The client was particular­ly emotional about this property as it was his deceased mother’s favourite living space and place of retirement. Therefore, he

was very specific in his desire to retain as much of the original structure’s actual materials as physically possible. Conservati­on, preservati­on, recycling and repair of everything on site was the given directive, in addition to all the varied modernizat­ion and expansion requests.

Upon inspecting the structure, it was determined that a gabion wall metal grid system would have to be created, forming an exoskeleto­n of all ground floor walls. This gabion grid welded together using steel flat and angle sections while bound by a wire mesh, was set in place to compensate for crumbling walls, by treating their mixed material’s mass, as filling

volume for this metal exoskeleto­n. Tie beams and an external retaining RCC plinth band were surgically inserted into trenches dug around foundation­s, to strengthen settling foundation­s and serve as a loading base plate support for the gabion grid system.

The original intermedia­te floor slab was predominan­tly constructe­d using wooden rafters, supporting planks covered by a mud floor, which was thereafter sealed with a thin cement plaster lining as a base for extensive indoor carpeting. Naturally with seepage and humidity, most of this material had deteriorat­ed over time and was even caving in at places. In keeping with the original

structural rhythm of the building’s original design, these old wooden rafters were replaced with steel girders supporting spanning stone slabs as a visible ceiling soffit from below. This girder and natural stone composite served as lost shuttering; for a minimal thickness, binding reinforced concrete slab which cantilever­s northwards by over three feet, to provide extra space for first floor rooms above.

A mezzanine floor stemming from a double height cut- out above the ground floor living room, reveals steel metal section rafters of the two top roof levels. These roof rafters follow the same structural rhythm interval of the intermedia­te floor’s steel girders supporting stone, for continuity. For the pitched roof, a pine wood thin soffit board provides a warm natural glow to all spaces below. The rooftop layer is made of the same corrugated metal sheet that was originally used in the house. Thermal insulation is provided between the rooftop surface and wooden soffit below, with an extra aluminum sheeting base layer as waterproof­ing protection.

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