A New Book Explores 25 of the World’s Most Sensuous Buildings

By Mike Chino – October 11, 2019

A New Book Explores 25 of the World’s Most Sensuous Buildings

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A New Book Explores 25 of the World’s Most Sensuous Buildings

Add to4ShareBy Mike Chino – October 11, “The Touch​” shows that great design is not just visually appealing—it engages all of the human senses.

A perfectly framed photo can provide a visual feast, but there’s so much more to architecture than meets the eye—and there’s no substitute for the immersive experience of visiting a place in person. In The Touch​, Nathan Williams of Kinfolk and Jonas Bjerre-Poulsen of Norm Architects take us inside 25 richly detailed interiors that engage all five human senses—from a copper house set in a Mumbai mango grove to an 18th-century Milanese apartment stripped down to the essence of its plaster.

Through sumptuous photography, interviews, and essays, Williams and Bjerre-Poulsen show how each project illustrates one of the five elements of haptic human-centric design—light, nature, materiality, color, and community—and enhances quality of life for all who enter. Read on for a peek at five stunning spaces with excerpts from the book, which is now available for order through gestalten.

Light: Corberó Resididence 

Photo Salva Lopez. The Touch, gestalten 2019

Xavier Corberó built what feels like the world’s biggest kaleidoscope. At the epicenter of the sculptor’s Catalan estate, a six-story structure rises like a contemporary Tower of Pisa. The interior of the tower is a hollow atrium; here, plants dangle and light spangles through arched windows, shining a surreal light show into a cathedral of modernism.

Nature: Copper House II

Alexander Wolfe, The Touch, gestalten 2019
photo Alexander Wolfe, The Touch, gestalten 2019

Nestled in a mango grove, Studio Mumbai’s Chondi residence bridges two opposing desires: a wish to bring nature indoors and, yet, to be sheltered from it. Its thin wooden walls welcome the encroaching landscape, light, and visitors inside. At the center of the house, a secret courtyard contains a space for living.

Materiality: De Cotiis Residence

Christian Moller Andersen, The Touch, gestalten 2019
Photo Christian Moller Andersen, The Touch, gestalten 2019

Architecture doesn’t have to mean building anew. Sometimes, it can mean removing things in order to rediscover an authenticity that centuries of meddling has obscured. In Milan, the private residence of Vincenzo De Cotiis is one such project; an homage to the raw beauty of an 18th-century space, which reflects the architect’s overarching fascination with aging objects.

Color: De Bayser Residence

Pelle Crepin, The Touch, gestalten 2019
Photo Pelle Crepin, The Touch, gestalten 2019

The fundamentals of Emmanuel de Bayser’s Berlin apartment toe the line of cool, muted modern design. Yet there’s a trick at play: by adding distinct shots of color, de Bayser gives every room its own richly hued rainbow and, in doing so, creates a personal paean to the more playful side of midcentury design.

Community: Tomba Brion

Christian Moller Andersen, The Touch Kinfolk 2019
Photo Christian Moller Andersen, The Touch Kinfolk 2019

Tombs are erected as monuments to those buried beneath them, but they can also be places for people to reflect more generally. In an isolated village cemetery towards the foothills of the Dolomites, Carlo Scarpa composed a mausoleum of such poetic proportions that it communes with all who enter it.

Th Touch - Spaces Designed for the Senses

The Touch: Spaces Designed for the Senses Amazon It is often said that beauty lies in the eye of the beholder. The Touch, the new book from Kinfolk and Norm Architects published by gestalten, presents an alternative: that good design is not only visually appealing but engages all of the human senses.

This is not psychological advice, always consult your licensed healthcare providers, and never disregard or delay medical advice based on information provided in this blog or articles. Our goal is to educate, guide, consult, and empower clients regarding mindfulness, design with intention, and experience to create spaces that reflect an elevated psychology of wellbeing.

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