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Yellow Hole House Chiangmai, Khwanchai and Tanit CP Architects

The Yellow Hole House is an extraordinarily elegant, exquisitely proportioned modern residence. Constructed in off-form concrete, the structure features a tall yellow-painted column and a yellow-painted projecting upper floor, with an oversailing roof like a plane wing. The design is clearly influenced by the mid-twentieth century European architecture of De Stijl, Gerrit Reitveld and Le Corbusier.

Constructed in off- form concrete, the house is evidently influenced by De Stijl and Le Corbusier.

Constructed in off- form concrete, the house is evidently influenced by De Stijl and Le Corbusier.

The 280-square meter house was designed by Kwanchai Suthamsao and Tanit Choom- sang of Plankrich Architects. The philosophy of Plankrich Architects is based on the idea of ‘alternative approaches in design, to try to turn crisis (disadvantage) into opportunities’. Anecdotal evidence suggests that it is tough surviving as an architectural practise in Chiangmai. 

 The two-story living space and a wall of books and collectable items. 

The reverse side of this situation is that it produces entrepreneurial architects who create opportunities, and Tanit Choomsang is no exception. He owns the Good View restaurant in Chiangmai, which opened its doors in 1996, with other outlets located in Bangkok, Pattaya and Vientiane, and he and his fellow director Khwanchai Suthamsao are the architects and proprietors of Hallo Dormtel, a funky low-cost student hostel and backpacker’s lodge with a bar and a souvenir shop, which is clad in recycled washing machine panels. The Plankrich office also accommodates a delightful cake shop adjacent to the entrance, that attracts  the public. 

First floor plan
Section Drawing

Tanit Choomsang is a former president of LANNA, an off shoot of the Association    of Siam Architects under Royal Patronage. The firm’s designs are driven by a desire to exploit local materials while simultaneously incorporating new technology, all with a view to meeting environmental concerns. From its base in the north, the practise has extended its operations to other regions of Thailand.

 The open-plan living and dining area on the first floor.

The principal features of the house are highlighted in yellow.

The principal features of the house are highlighted in yellow.

Built in the garden of their parents’ house, the two-bedroom Yellow Hole House is owned and occupied by Sivika Sirisanthana and her younger brother. Their father is the owner of a Toyota franchise in Thailand.

A glass block wall behind the kitchen is crisply detailed. 

The house is elevated approximately 900 mm above the surrounding ground level.

The plan of the house has a linear organ-ization, with the entrance accessed from a large carport at the eastern end of the site. A short flight of stairs leads to the lobby, and beyond is an open-plan ground floor with all the principal rooms, including the living, dining and kitchen areas, looking north over a luminous blue lap pool to the garden the siblings share with their parents. 

The house is elevated approximately 900 mm above the surrounding ground level.

The roof terrace above the carport.

A double-height space above the living room connects to a gallery on the upper floor that gives access to the two bedrooms. In the gallery, a dramatic two-story-high bookcase and display cabinet occupies one wall. Horizontal timber cladding and a glass block wall on the rear elevation are crisply detailed, while the air-conditioning units are cleverly concealed on the same rear wall. The raised ground floor level recalls traditional responses to flood-prone areas in Thailand.

The house, an elegant essay in a modern architectural language, is beautifully proportioned.

The precise orthogonal lines of the Yellow Hole House represent a determined break from traditional Thai residential forms. At the same time, the dwelling maintains the strong family relationship between children and their parents that is evident throughout Thailand. 

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