MOIRÉ NOIR
Some of the basic project goals were to create a large private deck connected to the 2nd floor unit and a separate enclosed outdoor space below linked to the 1st floor unit suitable for large gatherings and a secure parking space when needed. The addition needed to also include an external stair so that a stair inside the existing duplex could be removed. Removing this (internal) stair would free up a lot of valuable space allowing for the improved reconfiguration of both the 1st and 2nd floors.
The design conceived the 20’+ zone between the front of the existing duplex and sidewalk as semi-public, liminal space that blended (rather than divide) the conditions of public areas adjacent to the home with the more private spaces inside the home. The owner made it clear that they were not interested in stylistically mimicking ornamental tropes, but instead placed value in creating a space that functionally reproduced the patterns and meaning of a New Orleans front porch. The addition is shorter and closer to the street edge than the original facade.
The project takes the idea of a screen wall from an aesthetic of a partially constructed framed structure. Programmatically, an existing interior stair was removed from within the building (making more internal space available to each unit) and placed closer to the sidewalk as access to the upper dwelling unit via a partially enclosed porch screen which also encloses a ground level space that is both ample for parking and outdoor gatherings. The concept was for the screen to create an ambiguous feel of having both room-like privacy while maintaining visual access to the public spaces along the street. To further this ambiguity the screen has a visually dynamic quality that at acute angles (more prevalent from faster moving cars) the addition appears opaque, but as a pedestrian (slower moving) with more perpendicular views the interior spaces of the front porch appear more clearly. The whole is perceived as unified through a moire’ effect when viewed in motion.