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I've been picked up from airports in taxis before
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but never had to go to a jetty and be picked up by boat.
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'He's Piers Taylor, an award-winning architect.'
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This building is so tactile and just rich, materially.
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'And she's Caroline Quentin,
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'acclaimed actress and passionate property developer.'
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I've been expecting you, Mr Bond!
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'We've been given the keys to some of the most incredible houses in
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'the world...'
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- It's chock full of surprises, isn't it?
- Ooh!
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'..to discover the design innovation,
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'passion and endurance needed to transform architectural vision
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'into an extraordinary home.'
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If this was Hollywood, I'd be snogging you now.
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'Together we'll be travelling the globe...'
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- Look down there.
- I would but I'm trying not to kill us.
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No, you look ahead.
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'..meeting the architects and owners who have taken on the challenge
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'of building unconventional homes in demanding locations.'
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Just another day on the wing of a 747.
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'Whether it's navigating the logistics of constructing a house
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'on top of a remote mountain...'
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Why would you build a house where you can only get there
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by cable car?
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'..negotiating the ancient trees of a fragile forest...'
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You never see a building this close to the trees,
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I mean, that's six inches away.
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'..having a sea view whilst perched on the edge of
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'a dramatic coastal shoreline...'
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I'd love to know how you actually built this on what appears
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to be a sort of vertical cliff face.
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'..or excavating the earth to build a home deep underground.'
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No-one had ever built something like this before.
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It's a tightrope you're walking. It can go spectacularly wrong.
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Building a subterranean house embedded in the earth can provide
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an intriguing and magical living experience.
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Look how thick that bit of ground is.
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This is another world in here.
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But unearthing the landscape in order to build these ambitious homes
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is a path few dare to tread.
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There is always a moment when you feel fear.
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Nature is never to come back the same way.
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Caroline and I will be travelling from the undulating foothills of the
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Southern Alps of New Zealand...
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We had to use explosives to blow it all out.
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..to the sweeping green valleys of Switzerland.
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So, did you have a budget in mind when you started this build?
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Yeah, but we didn't make it.
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And from the lowlands of a Dutch nature reserve
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to the coastal farmlands of the Greek islands.
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The architects and I threw up our hands and said, "Do you know what,
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"it just isn't working."
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Discovering what it takes to design,
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build and live in the world's most extraordinary underground houses.
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Construction is stressful, it's tiring.
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It was hard labour and a lot of blood, sweat and tears.
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'The first stop on our discovery of underground architecture takes us to
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'the Aegean Sea...'
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THEY LAUGH
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'..and to the Greek island of Antiparos.'
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You love Greece, don't you?
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I love it. I've been coming to Greece for 40 years
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and I think it's about my favourite place in the world.
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I think it's the colour of the water,
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the colour of the sky and, still,
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- it's so unspoilt.
- Little white squares still.
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- Yeah.
- Exactly as you imagined it's going to be.
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There's nothing big, nothing breaking the skyline.
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There's a rule here that you can only build
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so far in one direction before you've got to turn or break it down.
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Oh, I see, and that explains all the little boxes. I see.
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These, historically, would have been fishermen's houses
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and probably a bit of subsistence farming.
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'We're heading to a spacious underground holiday home
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'where the owners wanted a contemporary house
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'big enough to entertain their family and friends.'
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The challenge facing the architects was to design a house with stunning
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sea views from each of its nine bedrooms.
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But, at the same time, discreetly conceal the building.
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I mean, I know we're going to go and see, rather bizarrely,
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an underground house here.
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- Yeah.
- Which I think is a really odd choice given that
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this is some of the most beautiful landscape I've ever seen.
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A view is a two-way responsibility and actually if you build on that
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to look at the view, you also have to accept that you are making
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something that people will look at.
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Yeah. But presumably that's why they've taken this underground option.
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- Yeah.
- So that, something like 80% or 90% of this house is underground,
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which sounds hideous to me because I'm slightly claustrophobic
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and I can't bear the thought of being underground.
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But I think this house is actually designed as a piece of landscape
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rather than a building.
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So you don't think it's going to be dark, and dingy, and damp?
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- I hope it isn't, and it would be a real shame if it was.
- Yeah.
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'Helping us locate this coastal hideaway is Theo,
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'who looks after the owner's home for them whilst they're back in the UK.'
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- Welcome to Antiparos.
- Thank you very much.
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THEY GREET EACH OTHER IN GREEK
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We're going to go over to that hill and then down again.
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I'm assuming we're not going to get a great big vision of the house
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because we know that it's 80% or 90% under the ground,
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so will we see it at all before we get there?
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You'll see it. It's a bit of a surprise, really.
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- Is that the house? Oh, my Lord.
- Wow.
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What a spot.
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SHE LAUGHS
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Oh, what a beautiful place!
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It's beautiful.
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SHE SINGS A HIGH NOTE
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I know, I know.
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'By hiding the majority of this structure beneath the landscape,
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'the architects managed to create a huge house on this site which both
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'embraces the view and retains the natural charm of this location.'
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Now, the owners are not here but they're very happy for you
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to have a look around.
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Thank you so much. Thank you so much, Theo, it's really, really kind of you.
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Enjoy your time and I'll see you later.
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Thank you very, very much.
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So, Caroline, tell me now, looking at this,
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are you still worried about feeling claustrophobic down there?
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Not yet. Not yet, but I'm not making up my mind,
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I'm not making up my mind yet.
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But, look at it, it's extraordinarily beautiful.
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This concealed home sits on a generous six-acre plot.
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Around 9,000 cubic metres of earth was excavated from the site,
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creating a giant crater.
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A concrete foundation and rear and internal walls
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were then built in this void, ten metres deep.
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The building unfolds on two levels
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to allow space for multiple bedrooms,
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bathrooms and terraces with private sea views.
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Concrete shafts rise up from the rear of the building
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to allow ventilation and natural light
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to enter the underground spaces.
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To fit in with the local architecture,
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Ktima's traditional white walls change direction
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after every ten metres.
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The green roof is covered in indigenous plants,
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allowing the underground living spaces to be invisible,
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with only the pool terrace and whitewashed walls on view.
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These walls look really enticing, don't they?
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- How are you with heights?
- Not as good as you.
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You should come up, it's great. Look.
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- OK.
- Caroline,
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there's all these lovely little terraces and courtyards within here.
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That's such a private space, as well.
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- And there'll be another one there.
- Yeah, another little private space.
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God, that's clever, isn't it?
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It's a real sense of sort of intimacy, isn't there?
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You could be naked reading a book all afternoon.
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There's a thought.
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This is such a lovely, enticing space.
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I mean, look at this, I don't know whether I'm inside or outside.
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I thought this was just a canopy of bamboo covering, this space,
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but actually there's glass up there so you can sit here even when it's raining.
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I mean, look at these walls and shapes and the shadow and
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the shade, it's so beautiful.
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And looking back through there, Caroline, to the sea.
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Yeah.
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This is the dream for me, this is absolutely the dream.
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It's a kind of, sort of, lesson
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in how to build a villa in a hot country.
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What I admire about the building is that it's a very clever bit of
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architecture, it's very thorough and really well-integrated with
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this place and that's why I warmed to it so much.
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'By hiding this modern whitewashed house in the landscape,
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'it not only retains the island's architectural heritage,
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'it also benefits from traditional methods of keeping living spaces cool underground.'
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I really want to have a nosy upstairs,
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just work out how it all fits together.
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I really want to have a peek about in here.
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- I'll catch you later.
- OK.
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This feels obviously like a really contemporary house
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but, at the same time, it has the qualities of something
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that's really ancient because people have been building in hot countries
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like this for hundreds and hundreds of years.
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What they've been doing is building in a way that harnesses
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the qualities of the ground, and, under the ground,
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is a stable temperature,
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so all of the living rooms in this house are under the ground.
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What happens then is that that lovely cool sea breeze
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is used to draw air through those rooms and then out of those shafts,
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those light shafts that are behind.
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And those shafts also bring light to the back of the rooms that would
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also be dark.
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Unlike a normal house where you have light coming in from both sides,
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an underground house can't do that, so you need to bring in light.
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This is actually the deepest underground
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that this house gets and, look, really light.
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I think for many years as architects we forgot how to do buildings that
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really spoke of their place.
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But this building shows that you can harness ancient technologies and
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still do a building that is totally contemporary.
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I'm loving this, I'm loving this over here.
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All it is
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is a little bit of light coming down but it's painted orange,
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so it just shines out neon, and, up there, all I can see is the bright,
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bright blue of the sky against the orange.
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It's so beautiful.
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SHE SIGHS
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All my misgivings about an underground house
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being gloomy, and dark, and dank have completely disappeared
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because this is light, and bright, and cool,
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because it's really, really hot out there.
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And it's just perfect temperature in here.
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Oh...
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It's got a lovely en suite.
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Hi, Caroline!
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THEY LAUGH
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You going to turn the shower on?
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- Yes.
- You might take your clothes off first, but...
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The view from here is so Greek, it couldn't be more Greek.
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It's white walls and then there's a blue dome but the blue dome is made
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out of sky.
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This is like some ancient Greek hilltop town, isn't it?
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Where the buildings are really
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close together and all you get is that fantastic view of the sky
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through the white walls.
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It's wonderful. It's so kind of refreshing down here as well,
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you don't feel like you're baking in the hot sun.
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Because actually this is a device to bring the air through
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and get the light in.
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The owners of this underground holiday home live in the UK
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with their two children.
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Karima is in London,
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so I'm giving her a call to find out what drew her family to this island.
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Did you fall in love with it straight away?
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'Straight away. Straight away.
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'Love at first sight.'
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- Really?
- 'My husband and I,
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'I think we were just about to be married
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'and we looked out at the sunset
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'and that was it, we said we need to see this sunset
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'till the day we die.'
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Oh, my God, that's so adorable!
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But, in purchasing the land,
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the couple had also bought into plans for a proposed building
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for the site, which had already been designed
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by Portuguese architects Camilo Rabelo and Susana Martins.
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So, you designed this for somebody that hadn't bought it,
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I mean, this was a speculative house for somebody.
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It's an abstract problem.
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- Yeah, yeah.
- It was like a bridge.
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It had a void below the structure and you could see through.
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'The plan was a beautiful plan but it wasn't a plan that
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'suited us as a family.
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'It was quite thin and quite narrow and we live in a tall,
248
00:13:05,400 --> 00:13:06,440
'thin house in London
249
00:13:06,440 --> 00:13:09,800
'and we were very keen to have something with a bit more space,
250
00:13:09,800 --> 00:13:11,760
'a bit more light and air.'
251
00:13:11,760 --> 00:13:13,880
They wanted a bigger house.
252
00:13:13,880 --> 00:13:14,920
How big?
253
00:13:15,880 --> 00:13:17,880
- Double.
- Double.
254
00:13:17,880 --> 00:13:20,360
And this started to change everything.
255
00:13:20,360 --> 00:13:22,320
'We spent a year working on those plans.
256
00:13:22,320 --> 00:13:25,120
'We kept changing them but it just...
257
00:13:25,120 --> 00:13:29,080
'it didn't work with the dimensions and the scope that we wanted,
258
00:13:29,080 --> 00:13:30,600
'it was frustrating.'
259
00:13:30,600 --> 00:13:31,920
Was it ever stressful?
260
00:13:33,440 --> 00:13:34,920
Stressful... Demanding,
261
00:13:34,920 --> 00:13:38,680
let's put it like that, because it was a lot of back and forward.
262
00:13:38,680 --> 00:13:42,280
'And, in the end, the architects and I sort of threw up our hands and
263
00:13:42,280 --> 00:13:44,480
'said, "Do you know what, it just isn't working."
264
00:13:44,480 --> 00:13:48,280
You had to abandon one idea, and how did that feel for you?
265
00:13:48,280 --> 00:13:51,120
At the beginning, we were not very happy but...
266
00:13:51,120 --> 00:13:53,760
It's always difficult to abandon an idea.
267
00:13:53,760 --> 00:13:57,920
And how long did it take you to get to a scheme
268
00:13:57,920 --> 00:14:00,720
that was recognisably this?
269
00:14:00,720 --> 00:14:02,680
- A minute.
- Really?
270
00:14:02,680 --> 00:14:05,280
- Can you show me the first sketch?
- Yes.
- I'm interested in that.
271
00:14:05,280 --> 00:14:07,800
First sketches are often the purist form of an idea.
272
00:14:07,800 --> 00:14:09,720
We started with two broken lines.
273
00:14:09,720 --> 00:14:11,920
Also very basic thoughts.
274
00:14:11,920 --> 00:14:15,920
Like, for example, the Greek amphitheatres, so...
275
00:14:15,920 --> 00:14:19,080
panoramic places for you to enjoy the view.
276
00:14:19,080 --> 00:14:21,080
What's interesting about this, though,
277
00:14:21,080 --> 00:14:25,160
is that it's absolutely the opposite of the previous scheme,
278
00:14:25,160 --> 00:14:28,160
which was a bridge hovering above a piece of landscape,
279
00:14:28,160 --> 00:14:30,480
whereas this is a piece of landscape.
280
00:14:30,480 --> 00:14:36,000
It allows you to conceal a very big building very subtly, but it looks,
281
00:14:36,000 --> 00:14:38,560
now, like a very finished building.
282
00:14:38,560 --> 00:14:40,120
The landscape is all grown back.
283
00:14:40,120 --> 00:14:44,560
But, actually, there must have been huge disturbance to make
284
00:14:44,560 --> 00:14:46,720
this building, huge disturbance to the landscape?
285
00:14:46,720 --> 00:14:51,480
In the beginning, I was very scared when they started the excavation,
286
00:14:51,480 --> 00:14:56,840
- yeah, very scared.
- It's a massive quarry, and it's huge destruction...
287
00:14:56,840 --> 00:15:00,440
There is always a moment when you feel fear, and that is the moment,
288
00:15:00,440 --> 00:15:02,640
when you see this immense crater,
289
00:15:02,640 --> 00:15:05,400
you say nature is never to come back the same way.
290
00:15:06,680 --> 00:15:09,560
But then, it's our role, we are architects.
291
00:15:09,560 --> 00:15:11,880
Architecture means to construct, to build.
292
00:15:11,880 --> 00:15:14,200
There is no visible structure here,
293
00:15:14,200 --> 00:15:16,600
but, tell me, how was it constructed?
294
00:15:16,600 --> 00:15:19,280
These walls are three-layered bricks.
295
00:15:19,280 --> 00:15:22,320
- Traditional brick?
- Traditional brick, which...
296
00:15:22,320 --> 00:15:25,840
- How thick?
- It's about 70 centimetres.
297
00:15:25,840 --> 00:15:28,480
And this is very good, for thermic reasons.
298
00:15:28,480 --> 00:15:30,600
This is the way they build here in Greece.
299
00:15:30,600 --> 00:15:35,120
Very thick walls, with deep reveals, with windows pushed right in.
300
00:15:35,120 --> 00:15:39,560
'When the drawings came to life, and the structure was built,
301
00:15:39,560 --> 00:15:42,240
'there were angles I could not have imagined. I knew the footprint of
302
00:15:42,240 --> 00:15:44,400
'the building and drawings back to front,
303
00:15:44,400 --> 00:15:47,120
'but when you looked at certain angles,
304
00:15:47,120 --> 00:15:50,720
'just...it was beyond, it was beyond what we'd hoped and imagined.'
305
00:15:50,720 --> 00:15:56,240
Standing back now, several years later, do you love this building?
306
00:15:57,320 --> 00:16:00,760
I love this building. Totally love this building, yes!
307
00:16:05,720 --> 00:16:08,600
This is what Karima fell in love with,
308
00:16:08,600 --> 00:16:13,920
as she and her husband saw this plot of land, and, looking at it now,
309
00:16:13,920 --> 00:16:15,600
they haven't made a mistake, have they?
310
00:16:15,600 --> 00:16:17,840
No, I mean, this is, for me, what Greece is about,
311
00:16:17,840 --> 00:16:22,040
this time of the evening, but facing west, getting the sunset over water.
312
00:16:22,040 --> 00:16:25,440
I defy anybody to look at this view
313
00:16:25,440 --> 00:16:27,680
and not think they've found paradise.
314
00:16:30,840 --> 00:16:32,280
Could you sell up and come here?
315
00:16:32,280 --> 00:16:35,320
I think I could, but you'd have to build me a house.
316
00:16:35,320 --> 00:16:37,320
- Deal.
- OK.
317
00:16:37,320 --> 00:16:38,360
Yes!
318
00:16:40,880 --> 00:16:42,360
This view is something
319
00:16:42,360 --> 00:16:46,200
that would make me leave my south-west leafy patch at home.
320
00:16:46,200 --> 00:16:50,200
If this was Hollywood, I'd be snogging you now.
321
00:17:06,080 --> 00:17:08,440
The next stop on our underground adventure
322
00:17:08,440 --> 00:17:11,720
takes us to the lush valleys of the Swiss Alps.
323
00:17:16,720 --> 00:17:19,840
- Oh, look down there!
- I would, but I'm trying not to kill us.
324
00:17:19,840 --> 00:17:21,320
No, you look ahead!
325
00:17:22,640 --> 00:17:25,040
'We're heading to the village of Vals,
326
00:17:25,040 --> 00:17:27,840
'perched over 1,000 metres above sea level,
327
00:17:27,840 --> 00:17:30,920
'and surrounded by alpine pasture land.'
328
00:17:30,920 --> 00:17:33,360
Look at these little dotted about, little shelters...
329
00:17:33,360 --> 00:17:35,960
I think this is it, actually, this is Vals. Here we are, Vals.
330
00:17:35,960 --> 00:17:37,840
Beautiful little buildings, aren't they?
331
00:17:37,840 --> 00:17:39,520
I mean, look up there, Caroline,
332
00:17:39,520 --> 00:17:41,640
these little barns built into the hill.
333
00:17:41,640 --> 00:17:44,480
The only thing I know about these little chalets and things
334
00:17:44,480 --> 00:17:47,160
is that I make one every Christmas out of gingerbread.
335
00:17:47,160 --> 00:17:48,960
Look at that little window!
336
00:17:48,960 --> 00:17:51,840
That's ridiculous. If Hansel and Gretel aren't in there,
337
00:17:51,840 --> 00:17:53,240
I want my money back.
338
00:17:54,880 --> 00:17:57,000
Although we're in the heart of Switzerland,
339
00:17:57,000 --> 00:17:59,080
the underground house we're looking for is
340
00:17:59,080 --> 00:18:01,400
owned by Dutch architect, Bjarne Mastenbroek.
341
00:18:02,560 --> 00:18:05,480
Wanting to push his creative boundaries
342
00:18:05,480 --> 00:18:07,920
and live out his childhood dream,
343
00:18:07,920 --> 00:18:11,840
he built an underground den as a holiday home for his family.
344
00:18:11,840 --> 00:18:15,680
Bjarne found a small, mountainside plot of land,
345
00:18:15,680 --> 00:18:17,200
but it came with a caveat -
346
00:18:17,200 --> 00:18:19,920
he had to keep the traditional agricultural
347
00:18:19,920 --> 00:18:22,160
barn, which existed on the site.
348
00:18:23,920 --> 00:18:25,800
Piers, this is what we've been talking about,
349
00:18:25,800 --> 00:18:27,920
these are the traditional farm buildings,
350
00:18:27,920 --> 00:18:30,440
and these would have had the animals underneath,
351
00:18:30,440 --> 00:18:34,000
and the heat would have been rising up and drying out the hay.
352
00:18:34,000 --> 00:18:35,680
But, of course,
353
00:18:35,680 --> 00:18:40,080
as in everywhere in the world now, animal welfare have become involved,
354
00:18:40,080 --> 00:18:42,840
so these are no longer available...
355
00:18:42,840 --> 00:18:46,000
CAROLINE IS DROWNED OUT BY MUSIC FROM THE SOUND OF MUSIC
356
00:18:47,880 --> 00:18:50,280
..monolithic...
357
00:18:50,280 --> 00:18:51,960
Just a tragic waste...
358
00:18:51,960 --> 00:18:53,800
Oh, dizzy!
359
00:18:53,800 --> 00:18:55,240
'Halfway up the hillside,
360
00:18:55,240 --> 00:18:58,200
'we stumble upon the old barn we've been looking for.'
361
00:18:59,400 --> 00:19:00,960
Well, this is the entrance.
362
00:19:00,960 --> 00:19:04,520
- Yeah.
- So somehow, underneath this, is our house, or...?
363
00:19:04,520 --> 00:19:07,000
Yeah, well, I think we go into it, and then we'll discover it.
364
00:19:07,000 --> 00:19:08,400
It's very mysterious, isn't it?
365
00:19:09,760 --> 00:19:11,400
- Shall I open it?
- Yeah.
366
00:19:13,440 --> 00:19:16,200
- Ooh.
- There's some hay.
367
00:19:16,200 --> 00:19:18,640
It's really exciting!
368
00:19:18,640 --> 00:19:21,680
God, look at it. This is insane.
369
00:19:22,960 --> 00:19:25,080
Rather than get rid of the old farm building,
370
00:19:25,080 --> 00:19:28,320
Bjarne converted it into the entrance for his underground home.
371
00:19:30,280 --> 00:19:35,000
Talking about how to combine modern and ancient agricultural buildings,
372
00:19:35,000 --> 00:19:36,680
this is like a masterclass in that, for me.
373
00:19:36,680 --> 00:19:37,880
It is, it totally is.
374
00:19:37,880 --> 00:19:40,400
- I mean, look at that concrete.
- That's concrete, isn't it, yeah.
375
00:19:40,400 --> 00:19:43,040
Yeah, and just the bare light fittings.
376
00:19:43,040 --> 00:19:47,120
And look at that, that is the tunnel, I think,
377
00:19:47,120 --> 00:19:48,520
that takes us into the house.
378
00:19:48,520 --> 00:19:49,720
Spooky, dark corridors
379
00:19:49,720 --> 00:19:52,360
and being underground, I don't really like very much,
380
00:19:52,360 --> 00:19:54,880
but I can see light at the end of that tunnel.
381
00:19:57,760 --> 00:20:00,400
It feels like we're entering church.
382
00:20:00,400 --> 00:20:03,200
Or a catacomb. I'll tell you what it reminds me of, actually,
383
00:20:03,200 --> 00:20:05,600
is when you go into the pyramids in Egypt.
384
00:20:05,600 --> 00:20:08,440
- Yeah.
- Where they draw you down into the earth.
385
00:20:08,440 --> 00:20:10,080
Yes. This is beautiful.
386
00:20:10,080 --> 00:20:11,280
That's lovely, isn't it?
387
00:20:11,280 --> 00:20:13,920
It feels like it's been here for thousands of years.
388
00:20:13,920 --> 00:20:17,160
And this slot of light here.
389
00:20:23,200 --> 00:20:25,560
I think it's really theatrical, I mean,
390
00:20:25,560 --> 00:20:29,720
the whole orchestrated entrance that leaves the world behind,
391
00:20:29,720 --> 00:20:32,720
and brings you into a sort of secret world.
392
00:20:32,720 --> 00:20:35,040
But it's also just beautiful material,
393
00:20:35,040 --> 00:20:37,280
beautiful light, beautiful angles.
394
00:20:37,280 --> 00:20:40,160
And then, just there, look, the little finials and doorknobs.
395
00:20:40,160 --> 00:20:41,800
- Yeah.
- To hang your coat on.
396
00:20:41,800 --> 00:20:43,320
They're hilarious, aren't they?
397
00:20:43,320 --> 00:20:47,440
Wow! I mean, the shaft of light there is just so lovely.
398
00:20:47,440 --> 00:20:48,880
- Look at that.
- Oh!
399
00:20:48,880 --> 00:20:54,720
Isn't it ridiculous, Piers, that that's so small, and so exciting.
400
00:20:54,720 --> 00:20:58,560
- Yeah.
- It's just a little slash of light through concrete.
401
00:20:58,560 --> 00:21:01,400
Why should that be so thrilling, but it is thrilling, isn't it?
402
00:21:01,400 --> 00:21:02,840
I'm coming out in goose bumps.
403
00:21:06,240 --> 00:21:08,280
As we find daylight again,
404
00:21:08,280 --> 00:21:11,200
the concave facade of the main house
405
00:21:11,200 --> 00:21:13,400
and its panoramic views are revealed.
406
00:21:29,600 --> 00:21:31,720
This is extraordinary, isn't it?
407
00:21:31,720 --> 00:21:35,240
'The deceptively spacious living room is a complete contrast
408
00:21:35,240 --> 00:21:36,760
'to the entrance tunnel.
409
00:21:37,960 --> 00:21:39,440
'Despite being underground,
410
00:21:39,440 --> 00:21:42,800
'the space is flooded with daylight and not at all what I'd expected.'
411
00:21:44,440 --> 00:21:50,760
I have never seen you ever sit down in a house when we arrive.
412
00:21:50,760 --> 00:21:54,440
I think, in a way, it's because that whole experience has been so
413
00:21:54,440 --> 00:21:58,640
carefully orchestrated, the barn, that fantastic hall,
414
00:21:58,640 --> 00:22:00,160
that when you come to this point,
415
00:22:00,160 --> 00:22:02,920
so I'm ready to sit and just kind of drink it in.
416
00:22:02,920 --> 00:22:05,200
I mean, it's a stunning sitting room.
417
00:22:05,200 --> 00:22:06,320
This would do me.
418
00:22:08,440 --> 00:22:11,600
The starting point for building this underground home
419
00:22:11,600 --> 00:22:14,320
was to dig a void 36 feet deep into the hillside,
420
00:22:14,320 --> 00:22:16,560
big enough to enclose this two-storey,
421
00:22:16,560 --> 00:22:17,920
four-bedroom house.
422
00:22:19,080 --> 00:22:21,920
A thick, reinforced retaining wall was then poured,
423
00:22:21,920 --> 00:22:24,240
and internal walls were built from concrete.
424
00:22:25,240 --> 00:22:28,560
The front of the house is sealed by a concave facade,
425
00:22:28,560 --> 00:22:30,240
made from local stone,
426
00:22:30,240 --> 00:22:32,360
and scattered with windows to allow light
427
00:22:32,360 --> 00:22:34,040
into every room of the property.
428
00:22:35,080 --> 00:22:37,080
A 22-metre underground tunnel
429
00:22:37,080 --> 00:22:39,760
connects the house to the barn entrance.
430
00:22:41,840 --> 00:22:43,920
To find out more about the inspiration
431
00:22:43,920 --> 00:22:45,600
for this award-winning home,
432
00:22:45,600 --> 00:22:49,280
we're meeting the owners, Bjarne and his wife, Katrin.
433
00:22:49,280 --> 00:22:51,960
- Hi, there.
- Lovely to meet you.
434
00:22:51,960 --> 00:22:54,640
- And who's this?
- It's Joanne.
435
00:22:54,640 --> 00:22:56,120
Joanne, hello, darling!
436
00:22:56,120 --> 00:23:00,520
I've got to start by saying this is an extraordinarily beautiful house.
437
00:23:00,520 --> 00:23:01,760
Bit unusual, but...
438
00:23:01,760 --> 00:23:05,960
What made you decide to build an underground house?
439
00:23:05,960 --> 00:23:09,200
When I was young, I built a lot of underground huts with my friends,
440
00:23:09,200 --> 00:23:12,240
and that idea I always kept in my mind.
441
00:23:12,240 --> 00:23:14,600
- Yeah.
- So I thought it would be nice to do it,
442
00:23:14,600 --> 00:23:17,760
and here it was quite obvious, because of the steep hill.
443
00:23:17,760 --> 00:23:20,920
I hope you don't mind the way I think of this house, but I feel,
444
00:23:20,920 --> 00:23:25,880
it looks to me like a meteorite or a big cannonball has hit,
445
00:23:25,880 --> 00:23:30,040
and then you pull it out, and you're left with this perfect circle.
446
00:23:30,040 --> 00:23:32,760
And then inside that circle, you built a house.
447
00:23:32,760 --> 00:23:35,880
It's a perfect circle, under 45 degrees,
448
00:23:35,880 --> 00:23:39,160
so the projection of it is an ellipse.
449
00:23:41,640 --> 00:23:46,360
The design of this house reminds me of homes for burrowing animals.
450
00:23:46,360 --> 00:23:49,920
Inside, the maze of rooms feels just like a warren.
451
00:23:49,920 --> 00:23:52,000
I wouldn't be surprised to see a rabbit.
452
00:23:52,000 --> 00:23:54,360
The layout may flow seamlessly now,
453
00:23:54,360 --> 00:23:57,440
but fitting a four-bedroom house in a small hole in the ground
454
00:23:57,440 --> 00:23:59,520
was a huge challenge for Bjarne.
455
00:23:59,520 --> 00:24:01,960
We spent a lot of time on the layout.
456
00:24:01,960 --> 00:24:04,720
First, it was like a banana-shaped building, three stories,
457
00:24:04,720 --> 00:24:08,000
but we had to cut it down all the time, also because of budget,
458
00:24:08,000 --> 00:24:10,400
until we reached, like, two, two-and-a-half stories,
459
00:24:10,400 --> 00:24:12,200
and much more un-deep,
460
00:24:12,200 --> 00:24:14,680
so then you have to organise all the rooms
461
00:24:14,680 --> 00:24:16,640
so that they can have daylight.
462
00:24:16,640 --> 00:24:19,400
That was probably the trickiest thing to get in.
463
00:24:19,400 --> 00:24:24,000
The design of the house as an overall design took a lot of time,
464
00:24:24,000 --> 00:24:27,200
and then we started building, but that took also more than two years.
465
00:24:27,200 --> 00:24:30,560
And how evolved was the design when you started building?
466
00:24:30,560 --> 00:24:32,800
Was it absolutely finished, or...?
467
00:24:32,800 --> 00:24:34,320
No, no, not at all.
468
00:24:34,320 --> 00:24:36,320
So, we also accepted mistakes.
469
00:24:36,320 --> 00:24:39,040
Maybe you will see in the tunnel there is one skylight
470
00:24:39,040 --> 00:24:40,800
that has a real bow in it,
471
00:24:40,800 --> 00:24:44,280
so something went wrong, and then you come here,
472
00:24:44,280 --> 00:24:47,080
and the contractors say, "Oh, I'm very sorry, I have to take it down."
473
00:24:47,080 --> 00:24:48,800
I say, "Oh, no, it's fine, keep it."
474
00:24:48,800 --> 00:24:52,360
And then he's looking at you like, "What? Can I keep it like this?"
475
00:24:52,360 --> 00:24:53,440
Because it's not perfect.
476
00:24:53,440 --> 00:24:55,640
- How amazing.
- You know, we don't want to have it perfect.
477
00:24:55,640 --> 00:24:58,320
My idea is that, for architecture, you don't need perfection.
478
00:24:58,320 --> 00:25:01,920
In a way, perfect architecture tends to become very boring.
479
00:25:03,600 --> 00:25:07,760
Although Bjarne was relaxed during the complex build of this underground house,
480
00:25:07,760 --> 00:25:11,360
there was one aspect that he wouldn't compromise on.
481
00:25:11,360 --> 00:25:14,800
He was adamant about using a local construction team,
482
00:25:14,800 --> 00:25:16,560
out of respect for the area.
483
00:25:18,240 --> 00:25:20,360
To buy a cup of coffee is massively expensive here.
484
00:25:20,360 --> 00:25:23,560
Is it massively expensive to use Swiss builders?
485
00:25:23,560 --> 00:25:25,200
Yes!
486
00:25:25,200 --> 00:25:29,360
- It is.
- So did you have a budget in mind when you started this build?
487
00:25:29,360 --> 00:25:31,560
Yeah, but we didn't make it.
488
00:25:31,560 --> 00:25:35,600
You didn't make it by what, a little or a lot?
489
00:25:35,600 --> 00:25:39,840
A lot. You know, I think we ran over budget about two-and-a-half times.
490
00:25:39,840 --> 00:25:43,160
Did the villagers take to the idea of you building it,
491
00:25:43,160 --> 00:25:45,760
because it's so unlike anything else around here?
492
00:25:45,760 --> 00:25:48,600
I think in the beginning they didn't believe it would ever be built.
493
00:25:48,600 --> 00:25:51,200
It was like it's too crazy, they won't be able to build it.
494
00:25:51,200 --> 00:25:53,720
- What, they didn't think you could do it?
- Yeah.
495
00:25:53,720 --> 00:25:55,840
They said later on, when it was built,
496
00:25:55,840 --> 00:25:58,320
that they gave a building permit within three weeks,
497
00:25:58,320 --> 00:26:01,160
which is very fast, because they thought it wouldn't be built.
498
00:26:01,160 --> 00:26:02,320
And now that you are here,
499
00:26:02,320 --> 00:26:04,280
and you're very much part of this village,
500
00:26:04,280 --> 00:26:07,320
do the people in the village accept you, and like this house?
501
00:26:08,320 --> 00:26:12,720
I think so. We had an open door for one day, when it was finished,
502
00:26:12,720 --> 00:26:15,640
and we expected, like 50 or 60 people,
503
00:26:15,640 --> 00:26:19,320
but it turned out that one third of the village came, over 350 people.
504
00:26:19,320 --> 00:26:22,600
- That's a lot of cups of tea!
- So they were curious, they were curious.
505
00:26:22,600 --> 00:26:23,920
Yeah.
506
00:26:29,400 --> 00:26:31,000
So this is a really beautiful space,
507
00:26:31,000 --> 00:26:34,880
I mean, this is so sensual, you know, bathed in this pink light.
508
00:26:34,880 --> 00:26:37,320
I love it, that's the mirror, isn't it, from the kitchen?
509
00:26:37,320 --> 00:26:38,480
Yeah. One-way mirror.
510
00:26:38,480 --> 00:26:43,120
- Yeah.
- But actually it shows that you don't always need lots of daylight,
511
00:26:43,120 --> 00:26:47,520
but you need the quality of light, and this has a very, sort of,
512
00:26:47,520 --> 00:26:49,840
serene quality, again.
513
00:26:49,840 --> 00:26:51,040
Into the light.
514
00:26:51,040 --> 00:26:55,520
Yeah, this is the, you could say, architectural bedroom.
515
00:26:58,520 --> 00:27:00,840
Look at that. Oh! That's beautiful,
516
00:27:00,840 --> 00:27:05,640
that's beautiful. That's just Switzerland in a picture frame.
517
00:27:05,640 --> 00:27:10,760
Yeah. Yeah, it's really the mountain we framed here.
518
00:27:12,560 --> 00:27:15,280
I love the, sort of, ad hoc-ness of this.
519
00:27:15,280 --> 00:27:18,560
The funny thing is, if you find a Japanese closet like this,
520
00:27:18,560 --> 00:27:22,480
that fits up to three millimetres to the house you already built...
521
00:27:22,480 --> 00:27:23,680
So it had to be this one.
522
00:27:23,680 --> 00:27:25,720
So had you made any plans for steps?
523
00:27:25,720 --> 00:27:29,840
No, we forgot a lot in this house while designing!
524
00:27:29,840 --> 00:27:32,200
I really like that idea, that, in fact,
525
00:27:32,200 --> 00:27:36,440
creativity sometimes comes out of mistakes, unplanned things.
526
00:27:36,440 --> 00:27:39,360
Some of the best things we didn't design, they just happened.
527
00:27:39,360 --> 00:27:41,760
I love this bedroom, this is so secret-y bedroom.
528
00:27:43,240 --> 00:27:45,800
But, you know, that's why architecture's not so important,
529
00:27:45,800 --> 00:27:47,880
it's the bed linen, at the end of the day!
530
00:27:47,880 --> 00:27:49,560
CAROLINE LAUGHS
531
00:27:57,520 --> 00:27:59,680
Oh, that's good, very good.
532
00:28:00,800 --> 00:28:04,520
How much pleasure do you get from coming here?
533
00:28:04,520 --> 00:28:08,200
Oh, a lot. That's why we come as often as we can.
534
00:28:08,200 --> 00:28:09,640
I think the main thing is
535
00:28:09,640 --> 00:28:12,680
that it's really completely different from being
536
00:28:12,680 --> 00:28:15,520
- in the big city.
- When you first walked in today, Piers,
537
00:28:15,520 --> 00:28:17,480
I've never seen you react in quite the same way.
538
00:28:17,480 --> 00:28:20,640
- What was it?
- I did, I guess I instinctively responded to
539
00:28:20,640 --> 00:28:23,560
the space, and atmosphere, and drama.
540
00:28:23,560 --> 00:28:25,360
But do you know why?
541
00:28:25,360 --> 00:28:28,920
Because architecture nowadays is too much about what you see,
542
00:28:28,920 --> 00:28:31,960
and the nice thing of an underground house is you can't get an image from
543
00:28:31,960 --> 00:28:35,000
this house, because the only thing you see is this hole.
544
00:28:35,000 --> 00:28:38,840
So, you have to explore it, and to undergo it,
545
00:28:38,840 --> 00:28:41,200
which is different from looking at only.
546
00:28:41,200 --> 00:28:45,120
Whereas this is rare, in that we can never judge it as an object.
547
00:28:45,120 --> 00:28:49,680
The only reason we were able to buy the land was that the old farmer
548
00:28:49,680 --> 00:28:53,000
didn't want to sell... He wanted to sell the land,
549
00:28:53,000 --> 00:28:57,120
but every time there was almost a sale, he backed out,
550
00:28:57,120 --> 00:29:00,360
and we didn't understand why from other people before us.
551
00:29:00,360 --> 00:29:04,000
But then I asked him can we keep the barn?
552
00:29:04,000 --> 00:29:07,920
And then the old man said, "Ah, you want to keep the barn?
553
00:29:07,920 --> 00:29:12,080
"Then I want to sell." So it turned out that he never wanted to sell
554
00:29:12,080 --> 00:29:14,320
because of destructing his old barn.
555
00:29:14,320 --> 00:29:16,080
But that's so moving.
556
00:29:16,080 --> 00:29:18,640
Has that farmer been back to see the house?
557
00:29:18,640 --> 00:29:22,240
Yeah, yeah, he came in, two sticks, 93 years old.
558
00:29:22,240 --> 00:29:27,440
And he was sitting very proudly here at the table while these 350 people
559
00:29:27,440 --> 00:29:29,760
from the village also entered the house.
560
00:29:34,680 --> 00:29:36,200
Yeah, that's too hot for me.
561
00:29:36,200 --> 00:29:38,400
- It's perfect for me.
- Yeah, but it's too hot for me!
562
00:29:40,640 --> 00:29:43,120
How about we grab some water? Can we use this?
563
00:29:43,120 --> 00:29:45,760
Yeah, this is a well we struck when we built the house.
564
00:29:45,760 --> 00:29:48,280
And, so, this is just beautiful drinking water?
565
00:29:48,280 --> 00:29:49,680
It's perfect drinking water.
566
00:29:49,680 --> 00:29:50,720
Six litres per minute.
567
00:29:50,720 --> 00:29:53,680
- Really?
- Yeah. It's ten degrees, summer and winter.
568
00:29:53,680 --> 00:29:55,600
Oh, God, it's beautiful water.
569
00:29:57,920 --> 00:30:00,240
- Perfect.
- And one thing is missing.
570
00:30:00,240 --> 00:30:04,320
Oh! This house has got absolutely everything.
571
00:30:09,160 --> 00:30:11,520
Now I realise I didn't bring my swimmers.
572
00:30:11,520 --> 00:30:13,400
- I'll get in in my undies.
- All right.
573
00:30:13,400 --> 00:30:15,520
- It is quite warm, actually.
- Come and sit here.
574
00:30:15,520 --> 00:30:18,040
Come and sit this side. That side is very hot, isn't it, Piers?
575
00:30:18,040 --> 00:30:20,880
Too hot for you, Piers?!
576
00:30:20,880 --> 00:30:22,520
- All right?!
- It's perfect, actually.
577
00:30:22,520 --> 00:30:25,000
- Do you want a little dribble?
- Lovely. Yes, please.
578
00:30:25,000 --> 00:30:26,960
- That'll do you.
- A little dribble of pleasure.
579
00:30:26,960 --> 00:30:28,280
- Thank you.
- Ooh!
580
00:30:34,480 --> 00:30:36,640
Everything about this house delights me.
581
00:30:37,840 --> 00:30:40,960
The entrance, the coming in, the fact that it's an underground house,
582
00:30:40,960 --> 00:30:42,440
which really surprises me.
583
00:30:42,440 --> 00:30:47,880
Yeah, not many buildings make me lose or forget my professional self
584
00:30:47,880 --> 00:30:53,200
and actually just experience it in all it's sort of dramatic glory.
585
00:30:53,200 --> 00:30:54,520
And this one, I really did.
586
00:30:56,400 --> 00:30:57,480
Cheers.
587
00:31:01,680 --> 00:31:03,480
I'm absolutely poached!
588
00:31:25,880 --> 00:31:28,520
Our next underground house takes us down under
589
00:31:28,520 --> 00:31:30,880
to New Zealand's South Island.
590
00:31:33,360 --> 00:31:37,400
The sunlight on these peaks is really heavenly.
591
00:31:37,400 --> 00:31:41,760
We're heading to a home built on an exposed plot of untamed wilderness.
592
00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:46,520
The owner wanted a peaceful retreat to retire to,
593
00:31:46,520 --> 00:31:49,520
where she could connect with this stunning scenery.
594
00:31:49,520 --> 00:31:51,720
Really, it's sublime, isn't it?
595
00:31:51,720 --> 00:31:53,080
Yeah, it's beautiful.
596
00:31:53,080 --> 00:31:56,120
The challenge for the design director was to create
597
00:31:56,120 --> 00:31:58,840
a relaxing space in this remote environment,
598
00:31:58,840 --> 00:32:02,640
which would enhance the raw landscape, not destroy it.
599
00:32:03,840 --> 00:32:07,680
Critically, this place is so beautiful, it's so fragile,
600
00:32:07,680 --> 00:32:09,480
the natural beauty of this place,
601
00:32:09,480 --> 00:32:12,200
that this house couldn't begin to compete with this scenery.
602
00:32:13,280 --> 00:32:15,880
In this conflict of house versus scenery,
603
00:32:15,880 --> 00:32:18,720
the design director needed to do something different.
604
00:32:20,280 --> 00:32:22,040
As he was building in New Zealand,
605
00:32:22,040 --> 00:32:25,000
a country which embraces architectural innovation,
606
00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:28,640
he decided to design a house underground to soften the impact
607
00:32:28,640 --> 00:32:31,160
a structure would have on this undulating landscape.
608
00:32:32,720 --> 00:32:35,040
It must be rather nice for architects here
609
00:32:35,040 --> 00:32:37,040
not to be hidebound by that massive
610
00:32:37,040 --> 00:32:41,440
weight of history on their shoulders, like Georgian buildings,
611
00:32:41,440 --> 00:32:43,360
- thatched cottages, and all that.
- Completely.
612
00:32:43,360 --> 00:32:46,600
They don't have any of that stuff to kind of deal with, do they?
613
00:32:46,600 --> 00:32:48,720
None. I'm throttled by that where I am.
614
00:32:48,720 --> 00:32:51,800
I live near Bath, and everything that you build,
615
00:32:51,800 --> 00:32:53,520
you have to consider in the context
616
00:32:53,520 --> 00:32:55,640
of something that was built 200 years ago.
617
00:32:55,640 --> 00:32:59,840
And it's almost like that period in time has to be frozen in aspic
618
00:32:59,840 --> 00:33:02,200
forever. But they have none of those preconceptions here.
619
00:33:02,200 --> 00:33:03,600
You can build anything.
620
00:33:03,600 --> 00:33:05,120
But the critical thing is,
621
00:33:05,120 --> 00:33:08,160
it's got to belong in terms of how it relates to nature.
622
00:33:09,560 --> 00:33:13,160
Now I can see a little sort of boomerang shape,
623
00:33:13,160 --> 00:33:14,840
a little wing shape,
624
00:33:14,840 --> 00:33:17,600
on the right. I think this might be where we're going, Piers.
625
00:33:17,600 --> 00:33:19,480
Hang on, hang on. Yeah, here, yeah.
626
00:33:19,480 --> 00:33:23,360
- Right.
- The glimpse I had, it looks like a little bird has landed.
627
00:33:23,360 --> 00:33:26,600
- There we are.
- You can't get more discreet than that, can you?
628
00:33:26,600 --> 00:33:28,720
That's a little hidden house tucked into a hill.
629
00:33:28,720 --> 00:33:30,040
I like that very much.
630
00:33:30,040 --> 00:33:31,280
- Shall we have a look?
- Let's.
631
00:33:32,640 --> 00:33:34,240
Wonderful views, aren't they?
632
00:33:34,240 --> 00:33:37,760
It's lovely, isn't it? This is the flight path into Queenstown.
633
00:33:37,760 --> 00:33:39,440
There's a plane coming in, Caroline.
634
00:33:46,840 --> 00:33:49,640
The landscape here has a raw elegance.
635
00:33:49,640 --> 00:33:51,640
But with this natural splendour
636
00:33:51,640 --> 00:33:54,080
comes the threat of natural disaster.
637
00:33:55,680 --> 00:33:57,800
Despite its weightless appearance,
638
00:33:57,800 --> 00:34:01,840
this house has been designed and heavily engineered to withstand
639
00:34:01,840 --> 00:34:03,400
the threat of earthquakes.
640
00:34:04,520 --> 00:34:09,720
I'm really interested in how this big wing of a roof just sits very
641
00:34:09,720 --> 00:34:11,760
delicately, as if it's floating.
642
00:34:11,760 --> 00:34:14,200
It's like a kite. That's what it reminds me of.
643
00:34:14,200 --> 00:34:17,680
A tiny delicate edge that looks fragile, but, actually, remember,
644
00:34:17,680 --> 00:34:20,320
is designed to resist seismic forces.
645
00:34:20,320 --> 00:34:21,640
My father was in the RAF.
646
00:34:21,640 --> 00:34:23,920
And when I was a little girl he used to make me paper planes.
647
00:34:23,920 --> 00:34:26,760
- Did he?
- Almost exactly that shape.
648
00:34:28,040 --> 00:34:30,800
As this building is mostly hidden underground,
649
00:34:30,800 --> 00:34:33,760
it allows the landscape to take centre stage.
650
00:34:35,000 --> 00:34:38,240
However, I'm intrigued that this house doesn't give away its
651
00:34:38,240 --> 00:34:41,520
subterranean qualities at first glance.
652
00:34:41,520 --> 00:34:43,960
I'm going to have to go up and have a look and get my bearings,
653
00:34:43,960 --> 00:34:46,600
because I can't quite work out what is where.
654
00:34:46,600 --> 00:34:48,800
- I'll see you in a bit.
- OK.
655
00:34:48,800 --> 00:34:51,600
Looking down here, I can already see different levels
656
00:34:51,600 --> 00:34:53,520
that really are underground.
657
00:34:54,840 --> 00:34:58,560
I think this house is all about the landscape and nothing else,
658
00:34:58,560 --> 00:35:00,200
because standing here now,
659
00:35:00,200 --> 00:35:02,640
with the sun rising over the top of that mountain,
660
00:35:02,640 --> 00:35:05,920
it shows that houses aren't about creating an impression.
661
00:35:05,920 --> 00:35:09,880
They're about creating atmosphere and rooting you in a landscape.
662
00:35:11,360 --> 00:35:13,440
To nestle the property within the land,
663
00:35:13,440 --> 00:35:18,400
dynamite was used to excavate 5,000 cubic metres of earth and rock,
664
00:35:18,400 --> 00:35:20,320
to create bunkers in the ground.
665
00:35:22,640 --> 00:35:24,920
The floor plan of this three-bedroom house
666
00:35:24,920 --> 00:35:27,400
is separated into two different structures.
667
00:35:27,400 --> 00:35:30,440
A main house with living areas and bedrooms,
668
00:35:30,440 --> 00:35:32,080
and a separate annexe.
669
00:35:34,240 --> 00:35:37,000
The underground areas are constructed from concrete,
670
00:35:37,000 --> 00:35:40,840
with east-facing glass facades to maximise natural light.
671
00:35:43,040 --> 00:35:47,040
The highly engineered wing-shaped roof is made from timber and heavily
672
00:35:47,040 --> 00:35:51,040
reinforced with steel to safeguard it against seismic activity.
673
00:35:53,240 --> 00:35:56,760
I mean, I know it's ostensibly an underground house,
674
00:35:56,760 --> 00:36:00,000
but I don't feel remotely like I'm under the ground.
675
00:36:00,000 --> 00:36:02,480
I feel like I'm almost in the sky.
676
00:36:02,480 --> 00:36:04,280
Well, you're under a wing, aren't you?
677
00:36:04,280 --> 00:36:06,840
Held up by this huge core.
678
00:36:08,000 --> 00:36:11,600
Chosen for its extreme strength and contemporary appearance,
679
00:36:11,600 --> 00:36:15,400
concrete was the primary material used in constructing this house.
680
00:36:17,040 --> 00:36:20,320
Almost 1,000 cubic metres were poured to create
681
00:36:20,320 --> 00:36:21,920
the rock solid floors,
682
00:36:21,920 --> 00:36:25,560
walls and the central hearth structure.
683
00:36:25,560 --> 00:36:28,800
This is a huge block of concrete right in the middle of the house.
684
00:36:28,800 --> 00:36:33,120
This goes right the way down into the underground bit of the house.
685
00:36:33,120 --> 00:36:35,480
And when all this is moving around in an earthquake,
686
00:36:35,480 --> 00:36:38,000
this is the most important part of the building.
687
00:36:38,000 --> 00:36:42,600
It doesn't feel to me as if it could withstand a slight gust of wind.
688
00:36:42,600 --> 00:36:48,320
It's very odd. It feels paper thin and delicate,
689
00:36:48,320 --> 00:36:50,920
but you think it's a rufty, tufty house, is it?
690
00:36:50,920 --> 00:36:52,640
Totally. This is a piece of ground.
691
00:36:52,640 --> 00:36:55,000
This is a rock. And the whole house is made out of concrete.
692
00:36:55,000 --> 00:36:56,840
And concrete is about the strongest material,
693
00:36:56,840 --> 00:36:59,640
but it's also the most thermally efficient material.
694
00:36:59,640 --> 00:37:03,080
So here we are in the middle of winter, and that sun is coming in,
695
00:37:03,080 --> 00:37:06,840
hitting this concrete early in the morning and heating up the house.
696
00:37:06,840 --> 00:37:10,200
So it's a very clever house in terms of how the light works
697
00:37:10,200 --> 00:37:12,840
and how the mass of the concrete does so much,
698
00:37:12,840 --> 00:37:14,880
other than just be nice to look at.
699
00:37:17,040 --> 00:37:19,520
Downstairs, sunken below ground level,
700
00:37:19,520 --> 00:37:23,480
there are two snug bedrooms wrapped in earth on three sides,
701
00:37:23,480 --> 00:37:25,400
but still flooded with daylight.
702
00:37:26,560 --> 00:37:29,160
We're right in the rock now, aren't we?
703
00:37:29,160 --> 00:37:32,800
- Underground?
- Yeah. This is what is great about building in the ground.
704
00:37:32,800 --> 00:37:34,560
All the rooms have direct access
705
00:37:34,560 --> 00:37:36,600
right the way out into the landscape.
706
00:37:36,600 --> 00:37:40,760
But, actually, down here, there is a sense of the house enveloping you,
707
00:37:40,760 --> 00:37:42,600
and really cocooning you.
708
00:37:42,600 --> 00:37:43,920
And this is the bedrock.
709
00:37:43,920 --> 00:37:46,480
This is the ground that they had to hollow out to
710
00:37:46,480 --> 00:37:49,400
make this house. I mean, gosh, that would have taken some doing.
711
00:37:49,400 --> 00:37:51,160
How did they do that, dynamite?
712
00:37:51,160 --> 00:37:53,520
Yeah. Beautiful layered rock strata, isn't it?
713
00:37:53,520 --> 00:37:55,440
What, just blow a massive crater?
714
00:37:55,440 --> 00:37:57,680
Blow a massive hole and fill it full of house.
715
00:37:57,680 --> 00:38:00,880
- Really?
- Yeah. But it's interesting, because the house is quite nestled.
716
00:38:00,880 --> 00:38:02,120
And I think unless you did that,
717
00:38:02,120 --> 00:38:04,280
the house would be perched on the top of this hill
718
00:38:04,280 --> 00:38:06,160
at the mercy of the elements.
719
00:38:10,800 --> 00:38:13,920
This house is very complex in many ways.
720
00:38:13,920 --> 00:38:17,240
It takes on enormous themes of landscape
721
00:38:17,240 --> 00:38:20,080
in this big, expansive wilderness.
722
00:38:20,080 --> 00:38:24,720
But, at its heart, it's a very simple exercise in homemaking.
723
00:38:24,720 --> 00:38:29,480
And at the heart of this house is the hearth, the fireplace.
724
00:38:29,480 --> 00:38:34,400
What the hearth also does is root this house right the way down to
725
00:38:34,400 --> 00:38:40,080
the ground. And what happens is the ground is cut around it to make some
726
00:38:40,080 --> 00:38:42,600
bedrooms, a lot of concrete in the ground here.
727
00:38:42,600 --> 00:38:45,600
And then the roof, very thin edges,
728
00:38:45,600 --> 00:38:50,280
kicks up and is anchored right the way to the top of this hearth.
729
00:38:50,280 --> 00:38:56,400
And then there's the bedrooms, and then there's living spaces above.
730
00:38:56,400 --> 00:38:59,680
And what the sun is then allowed to do,
731
00:38:59,680 --> 00:39:03,120
is to enter around here and go around at the end of the day
732
00:39:03,120 --> 00:39:04,760
to there.
733
00:39:04,760 --> 00:39:07,840
So what you get is a fantastic quality of light in the morning.
734
00:39:07,840 --> 00:39:11,320
And then in the evening, underneath,
735
00:39:11,320 --> 00:39:14,240
all of this. And, really, that's it.
736
00:39:14,240 --> 00:39:18,400
This fantastic hearth that really does everything.
737
00:39:18,400 --> 00:39:20,200
And it's really effective.
738
00:39:26,560 --> 00:39:29,800
I'm off to discover owner Louise's favourite room,
739
00:39:29,800 --> 00:39:33,760
an underground chamber, completely separate from the main house.
740
00:39:35,440 --> 00:39:37,880
Louise calls this her inner sanctum.
741
00:39:37,880 --> 00:39:39,840
And I can see exactly what she means,
742
00:39:39,840 --> 00:39:42,240
because if you're going to have a private space,
743
00:39:42,240 --> 00:39:43,680
somewhere to disappear into
744
00:39:43,680 --> 00:39:46,600
when the family are having a thrashing party over the road,
745
00:39:46,600 --> 00:39:50,240
you want some peace and quiet, this is the perfect place to have it.
746
00:39:50,240 --> 00:39:54,360
You've got a beautiful bed with absolutely magnificent views.
747
00:39:54,360 --> 00:39:56,720
A bath that overlooks the mountain.
748
00:39:56,720 --> 00:39:59,760
And even a fireplace.
749
00:40:01,600 --> 00:40:04,120
I suppose these are built-in wardrobes.
750
00:40:04,120 --> 00:40:06,480
It must be great to have so much space for all your...
751
00:40:06,480 --> 00:40:08,480
No, it's not a built-in wardrobe!
752
00:40:08,480 --> 00:40:11,400
It's a kitchen! It's a kitchen in the bedroom.
753
00:40:11,400 --> 00:40:13,760
Oh, my Lord! That's marvellous.
754
00:40:13,760 --> 00:40:16,440
What else is here? Sorry. Won't be a second.
755
00:40:16,440 --> 00:40:19,280
It's a fridge! I love that!
756
00:40:22,000 --> 00:40:25,960
Again, there's this fantastic use of concrete here.
757
00:40:25,960 --> 00:40:27,440
Just like in the other house.
758
00:40:27,440 --> 00:40:30,160
These are two separate houses.
759
00:40:30,160 --> 00:40:35,600
And then here it's been cut away, so there's a light that's allowed in.
760
00:40:35,600 --> 00:40:37,920
This skylight is created through the concrete.
761
00:40:37,920 --> 00:40:40,160
But what's really incredible to me
762
00:40:40,160 --> 00:40:43,680
is you are suddenly aware of how thick this roof is.
763
00:40:46,440 --> 00:40:50,120
It took owner Louise several years to find this plot of land,
764
00:40:50,120 --> 00:40:54,160
and I'm keen to hear from her and her builder, Nichol Thomson,
765
00:40:54,160 --> 00:40:56,920
what challenges they faced when constructing this home.
766
00:40:59,000 --> 00:41:01,880
What was it about building a house here for you?
767
00:41:01,880 --> 00:41:05,000
For me, personally, it was about not living in the city.
768
00:41:05,000 --> 00:41:07,120
And I guess slow down in some ways.
769
00:41:07,120 --> 00:41:11,720
At what point was the decision made to make this an underground house?
770
00:41:11,720 --> 00:41:14,960
The landscape was the most important part.
771
00:41:14,960 --> 00:41:20,320
And the brief had a sentence in it which was, "Let the land speak."
772
00:41:20,320 --> 00:41:23,560
The interesting thing is when you go through a process like this,
773
00:41:23,560 --> 00:41:27,240
there are so many different kinds of design that you like.
774
00:41:27,240 --> 00:41:32,520
- Yeah.
- So, because the landform here is full of hills,
775
00:41:32,520 --> 00:41:37,040
I really wanted the buildings to sit within the land.
776
00:41:37,040 --> 00:41:41,360
We wanted the buildings to feel as though they had just been planted
777
00:41:41,360 --> 00:41:42,760
into the ground.
778
00:41:42,760 --> 00:41:45,560
So there was an incredible amount of effort that went into
779
00:41:45,560 --> 00:41:48,360
thinking through how that would work.
780
00:41:48,360 --> 00:41:51,520
We are building here in a remote part of New Zealand.
781
00:41:51,520 --> 00:41:54,320
Everything has to be brought in by truck,
782
00:41:54,320 --> 00:41:58,000
often off-loaded two or three times before it arrives here.
783
00:41:58,000 --> 00:42:00,360
Things get broken, things get lost.
784
00:42:00,360 --> 00:42:03,640
The first thing was obviously trying to even work out the volume of earth
785
00:42:03,640 --> 00:42:05,880
that had to be removed to build it into the landscape.
786
00:42:05,880 --> 00:42:08,880
And then we had to use explosives to blow it all out.
787
00:42:08,880 --> 00:42:12,560
So a lot of the rock that came out, you'll see in parts,
788
00:42:12,560 --> 00:42:15,000
retaining walls and things all around the property,
789
00:42:15,000 --> 00:42:16,520
it's all been reused.
790
00:42:16,520 --> 00:42:20,640
Constructing this unconventional house took a team of local craftsmen
791
00:42:20,640 --> 00:42:23,200
three years to complete.
792
00:42:23,200 --> 00:42:27,640
The experimental architecture meant a lot of problem-solving for Nichol.
793
00:42:27,640 --> 00:42:31,440
Were there any points when you thought, "This is a tricky build."
794
00:42:33,000 --> 00:42:35,800
Funnily enough, right at the start when we were troubleshooting...
795
00:42:36,920 --> 00:42:38,920
The concrete's a special sort of a mix.
796
00:42:38,920 --> 00:42:41,440
Concrete is a little bit like a cake,
797
00:42:41,440 --> 00:42:43,840
for want of a better description,
798
00:42:43,840 --> 00:42:46,440
so, essentially, the recipe had to be tried out
799
00:42:46,440 --> 00:42:48,120
over and over and over again.
800
00:42:48,120 --> 00:42:52,960
The aggregates, the stones, the cement percentages, the sand,
801
00:42:52,960 --> 00:42:54,880
everything's quite different here.
802
00:42:54,880 --> 00:42:57,680
We ended up, we had sort of a little sort of concrete graveyard
803
00:42:57,680 --> 00:42:59,520
for a while, with about ten or 12 little...
804
00:42:59,520 --> 00:43:01,320
- Tombstones.
- ..tombstones.
805
00:43:01,320 --> 00:43:02,520
It took ten or 12 tries?
806
00:43:02,520 --> 00:43:04,040
Yeah, it took us about six weeks.
807
00:43:04,040 --> 00:43:08,600
And at any point did you think, "Oh, I wish I hadn't start this?"
808
00:43:08,600 --> 00:43:10,200
I think everyone does.
809
00:43:10,200 --> 00:43:14,920
I think construction is stressful, it's tiring.
810
00:43:14,920 --> 00:43:19,360
And the whole time you are looking at the spaces that you've studied
811
00:43:19,360 --> 00:43:21,840
and planned intensely over, going,
812
00:43:21,840 --> 00:43:24,320
"Is it big enough, is it small enough,
813
00:43:24,320 --> 00:43:26,360
"does it feel right?"
814
00:43:26,360 --> 00:43:30,040
And so you run this roller-coaster of emotion through the whole
815
00:43:30,040 --> 00:43:31,200
construction period.
816
00:43:31,200 --> 00:43:33,240
And now it's actually finally built...
817
00:43:33,240 --> 00:43:35,960
- Yes?
- ..is there anything you'd change about it?
818
00:43:35,960 --> 00:43:37,880
I'd probably put a few more power points in!
819
00:43:47,480 --> 00:43:50,040
One of the things that fascinates me about this house
820
00:43:50,040 --> 00:43:53,280
is that it takes you underground and cossets you
821
00:43:53,280 --> 00:43:55,280
with this fantastic hearth,
822
00:43:55,280 --> 00:43:58,600
and then it pushes you out into the wilderness.
823
00:43:58,600 --> 00:44:02,520
One minute you feel very, very safe, under the ground,
824
00:44:02,520 --> 00:44:05,440
and the next minute you feel like you're a bird,
825
00:44:05,440 --> 00:44:09,240
soaring above the white peaks of the mountains.
826
00:44:10,640 --> 00:44:11,760
Very clever.
827
00:44:30,520 --> 00:44:34,640
'The last stop on our journey to unearth underground homes takes us
828
00:44:34,640 --> 00:44:39,000
'to the Netherlands, and Piers has insisted we adopt the local method
829
00:44:39,000 --> 00:44:40,240
'of transport.'
830
00:44:40,240 --> 00:44:42,920
Piers, you go ahead because I'm really wobbly!
831
00:44:43,960 --> 00:44:46,320
'We're heading to a Dutch nature reserve,
832
00:44:46,320 --> 00:44:49,200
'just 20 miles out of the city centre.
833
00:44:49,200 --> 00:44:52,360
'This protected woodland is considered a local beauty spot,
834
00:44:52,360 --> 00:44:55,120
'and the perfect escape from the bustle of city life.'
835
00:44:56,560 --> 00:44:59,960
I love that, that you can live in a piece of wilderness but it's only
836
00:44:59,960 --> 00:45:03,800
half an hour from a fantastic cosmopolitan city - Amsterdam.
837
00:45:03,800 --> 00:45:04,960
This is my idea of heaven.
838
00:45:08,640 --> 00:45:10,320
The four bedroom family home
839
00:45:10,320 --> 00:45:13,320
we're visiting is owned by architect Sanne Oomen.
840
00:45:13,320 --> 00:45:16,520
where she lives with her husband, Lucas, and their two children.
841
00:45:19,320 --> 00:45:22,960
This family are passionate about living in a sustainable way.
842
00:45:22,960 --> 00:45:25,160
They undertook the challenge of building a large,
843
00:45:25,160 --> 00:45:27,960
contemporary home embedded in the landscape,
844
00:45:27,960 --> 00:45:30,600
so that it integrates with the local nature reserve.
845
00:45:32,760 --> 00:45:36,800
And, Piers, this is a proper eco-build?
846
00:45:36,800 --> 00:45:37,960
It is, it absolutely is.
847
00:45:37,960 --> 00:45:41,800
It's carbon neutral and is super insulated,
848
00:45:41,800 --> 00:45:43,520
and that's why it's underground,
849
00:45:43,520 --> 00:45:47,760
because they use all the earth to heat it and cool it.
850
00:45:47,760 --> 00:45:51,520
And to build a house that's not visible, of course,
851
00:45:51,520 --> 00:45:54,800
is important when you're dealing with a protected forest,
852
00:45:54,800 --> 00:45:56,360
which this is.
853
00:45:56,360 --> 00:45:58,480
Landscape is everything, I think, for this house.
854
00:45:58,480 --> 00:46:01,320
So it's going to be really interesting to see how it fits in.
855
00:46:02,880 --> 00:46:04,400
Here we are. This is gorgeous.
856
00:46:04,400 --> 00:46:05,440
CAROLINE LAUGHS
857
00:46:07,840 --> 00:46:09,280
I love it already!
858
00:46:09,280 --> 00:46:11,720
Talk about green roof, that's the most bushy, green roof
859
00:46:11,720 --> 00:46:13,000
I've ever seen.
860
00:46:13,000 --> 00:46:14,240
It's a hobbit house!
861
00:46:24,720 --> 00:46:28,040
So many eco-houses are so dry, this is so quirky already.
862
00:46:28,040 --> 00:46:30,920
That's very interesting, because when you think of an eco-house you
863
00:46:30,920 --> 00:46:32,000
suddenly become serious.
864
00:46:32,000 --> 00:46:34,040
- Yeah.
- So, "Oh, no, we're protecting the Earth,
865
00:46:34,040 --> 00:46:35,320
"it's got to be very serious."
866
00:46:35,320 --> 00:46:38,360
- Dry muesli.
- Dry muesli and dripping rainwater.
867
00:46:38,360 --> 00:46:40,440
And, actually, this is just hilarious.
868
00:46:40,440 --> 00:46:45,040
But so much of this is banished from contemporary architecture -
869
00:46:45,040 --> 00:46:49,440
humour, wit, life, and this is so verdant and bushy.
870
00:46:49,440 --> 00:46:51,880
It's wonderful, look at it!
871
00:46:53,040 --> 00:46:54,080
"Welcome...
872
00:46:54,080 --> 00:46:56,120
"Mel..Melle, Mats..."
873
00:46:56,120 --> 00:46:58,600
Oh, this is the children... "Melle, Mats,
874
00:46:58,600 --> 00:47:00,680
"Sonne and Lucas.
875
00:47:00,680 --> 00:47:03,480
"All living here."
876
00:47:03,480 --> 00:47:04,800
It's very stylish, isn't it?
877
00:47:04,800 --> 00:47:07,120
Very stylish, the arrow is very stylish.
878
00:47:07,120 --> 00:47:08,880
I wonder what's behind here.
879
00:47:08,880 --> 00:47:11,920
- We can find out because I've got the key to the door.
- The buzzer.
880
00:47:11,920 --> 00:47:13,080
There we are.
881
00:47:15,600 --> 00:47:18,720
- This is great.
- Oh, look!
882
00:47:18,720 --> 00:47:21,160
Now, listen, I'm thrilled to see this.
883
00:47:21,160 --> 00:47:25,280
I think it's so lovely to see people using things in a new and kind of
884
00:47:25,280 --> 00:47:29,960
- fun way.
- Yes. This is stuffed full of things, this house, isn't it?
885
00:47:29,960 --> 00:47:31,160
Look, that's beautiful.
886
00:47:31,160 --> 00:47:32,920
I can hear you.
887
00:47:32,920 --> 00:47:36,480
Do you know, that reminds me, that reminds me of an old friend...
888
00:47:36,480 --> 00:47:38,000
There's so much to look at.
889
00:47:38,000 --> 00:47:39,560
I already want to know what that is.
890
00:47:39,560 --> 00:47:40,960
That's a light into the basement,
891
00:47:40,960 --> 00:47:42,760
I know that without even going down there.
892
00:47:42,760 --> 00:47:45,760
So that light is coming straight downstairs into the basement?
893
00:47:45,760 --> 00:47:48,720
- Straight downstairs.
- Because, oh, God, we're underground, that's why,
894
00:47:48,720 --> 00:47:52,160
- I've just realised.
- Yes.
- So that is in the surface of the garden
895
00:47:52,160 --> 00:47:54,000
that we've just walked through.
896
00:47:54,000 --> 00:47:58,320
- Yeah.
- And suddenly, opening up, and, look, we're outside again.
897
00:48:01,320 --> 00:48:03,040
Piers, this is so exciting.
898
00:48:03,040 --> 00:48:04,360
I love it, I love it.
899
00:48:04,360 --> 00:48:06,000
I love the way they live in it.
900
00:48:06,000 --> 00:48:07,880
Yes, we're underground,
901
00:48:07,880 --> 00:48:11,320
we're underneath that roof at the moment but I don't feel it at all,
902
00:48:11,320 --> 00:48:14,120
because we're connected both by those skylights there
903
00:48:14,120 --> 00:48:16,120
and then straight out the front there.
904
00:48:16,120 --> 00:48:19,800
And what a brilliant panorama of this incredible woodland.
905
00:48:19,800 --> 00:48:20,880
I'm very excited.
906
00:48:20,880 --> 00:48:22,160
Me too, I don't know where to go.
907
00:48:22,160 --> 00:48:23,800
Let's go down there!
908
00:48:25,440 --> 00:48:29,320
This eco-home was designed to be part of the natural environment
909
00:48:29,320 --> 00:48:31,480
and to champion sustainable principles.
910
00:48:32,920 --> 00:48:36,280
After deep excavation and the laying of concrete foundations,
911
00:48:36,280 --> 00:48:40,080
the bedrooms and bathrooms were stacked across three floors
912
00:48:40,080 --> 00:48:41,720
on the north side of the building.
913
00:48:41,720 --> 00:48:44,840
A large, open-plan living space inhabits the south.
914
00:48:46,840 --> 00:48:49,440
From the north side, the entire building is embedded
915
00:48:49,440 --> 00:48:50,640
in earth and greenery,
916
00:48:50,640 --> 00:48:53,120
for natural insulation and camouflage.
917
00:48:54,680 --> 00:48:58,440
The south facing glass facade and a series of skylights bring natural
918
00:48:58,440 --> 00:49:01,160
light into even the deepest parts of the house.
919
00:49:04,960 --> 00:49:08,520
The interior of this home is crammed full of the art the couple have
920
00:49:08,520 --> 00:49:12,720
collected and sits alongside bespoke, handcrafted furniture,
921
00:49:12,720 --> 00:49:16,960
made from reclaimed and up-cycled objects and materials.
922
00:49:16,960 --> 00:49:18,560
And, look, your taxi's here!
923
00:49:19,920 --> 00:49:22,200
That's comedy, isn't it?
924
00:49:22,200 --> 00:49:23,720
- That's a Daimler.
- It is.
925
00:49:25,160 --> 00:49:28,640
What's brilliant, this furniture is actually upside down
926
00:49:28,640 --> 00:49:31,080
and on its side, and it's about, I think,
927
00:49:31,080 --> 00:49:34,280
saying take a look at things from a different perspective.
928
00:49:34,280 --> 00:49:36,160
Let's turn this on its head.
929
00:49:36,160 --> 00:49:38,080
A lot of architects did this in the '70s.
930
00:49:38,080 --> 00:49:41,440
They put radiators on the ceiling and at strange angles and things.
931
00:49:41,440 --> 00:49:42,920
They've got it right here.
932
00:49:42,920 --> 00:49:45,320
They know how to do what's practical,
933
00:49:45,320 --> 00:49:48,320
but to make it beautiful, and funny, and clever,
934
00:49:48,320 --> 00:49:51,720
and interesting, and great to use.
935
00:49:51,720 --> 00:49:54,520
This eclectic mix of up-cycled furnishings
936
00:49:54,520 --> 00:49:57,160
are a stunning example of great design,
937
00:49:57,160 --> 00:49:59,800
fused with zero waste eco-principles.
938
00:50:01,240 --> 00:50:06,680
The centrepiece of the whole house is this big Finnish...? Finn oven?
939
00:50:06,680 --> 00:50:08,720
Finn - F-I-N-N, as in Finnish,
940
00:50:08,720 --> 00:50:11,720
and the principle is that the flue snakes around
941
00:50:11,720 --> 00:50:16,200
to make sure that all of the heat, 90% of it, stays in here.
942
00:50:16,200 --> 00:50:18,320
So, they're not just pipes that go up,
943
00:50:18,320 --> 00:50:20,240
and therefore you lose all the heat out the top?
944
00:50:20,240 --> 00:50:22,280
This actually stays in the body of the oven?
945
00:50:22,280 --> 00:50:24,040
And because it's made out of concrete,
946
00:50:24,040 --> 00:50:26,960
this will stay warm probably for 12 hours after the fire goes out.
947
00:50:26,960 --> 00:50:28,240
Is this ancient or modern?
948
00:50:28,240 --> 00:50:31,560
It's an ancient principle, but used in a 21st-century house.
949
00:50:33,160 --> 00:50:34,680
Alongside the Finn oven,
950
00:50:34,680 --> 00:50:37,800
the house is heated by a wood pellet boiler system
951
00:50:37,800 --> 00:50:42,760
and solar panels placed due south, to maximise the sun's rays.
952
00:50:42,760 --> 00:50:45,680
This provides enough renewable electricity
953
00:50:45,680 --> 00:50:48,640
to power the entire house and the family's electric car
954
00:50:48,640 --> 00:50:50,200
all year round.
955
00:50:52,160 --> 00:50:54,880
Even the orientation of the house is positioned
956
00:50:54,880 --> 00:50:57,520
with environmental sensitivity.
957
00:50:57,520 --> 00:50:59,760
There's clearly a hierarchy of the spaces,
958
00:50:59,760 --> 00:51:03,680
so clearly the main spaces that get the light and height face south,
959
00:51:03,680 --> 00:51:05,800
face the view, and that's where you live.
960
00:51:05,800 --> 00:51:08,520
Then the less important spaces buried at the back,
961
00:51:08,520 --> 00:51:10,400
because they don't need the light.
962
00:51:10,400 --> 00:51:13,440
But here, also, these roof lights let in tonnes of light.
963
00:51:13,440 --> 00:51:17,920
A roof light lets in between three and six times as much light
964
00:51:17,920 --> 00:51:21,960
- as a window.
- Really?
- Seriously, because you get the sky coming in.
965
00:51:21,960 --> 00:51:24,400
- I never knew that!
- And it's flooded with light up there,
966
00:51:24,400 --> 00:51:27,000
just from a couple of roof lights.
967
00:51:27,000 --> 00:51:29,480
But it's chock full of surprises, isn't it?
968
00:51:29,480 --> 00:51:30,520
Oh!
969
00:51:32,960 --> 00:51:34,400
You knew that was going to happen!
970
00:51:34,400 --> 00:51:35,760
SHE GASPS
971
00:51:37,600 --> 00:51:38,840
Oh...
972
00:51:43,640 --> 00:51:45,320
This is another world in here.
973
00:51:47,040 --> 00:51:51,040
And look how thick that bit of ground is up to the sky.
974
00:51:52,640 --> 00:51:54,400
That's how far we are underground.
975
00:51:54,400 --> 00:51:56,000
PATTERING
976
00:51:56,000 --> 00:51:57,240
I can hear the rain.
977
00:51:59,920 --> 00:52:02,760
And even with the rain, you can feel the silence.
978
00:52:07,080 --> 00:52:08,520
It's the perfect bedroom.
979
00:52:10,040 --> 00:52:11,440
WHIRRING
980
00:52:22,560 --> 00:52:26,480
This house is rich with layers of ideas and complexity,
981
00:52:26,480 --> 00:52:28,840
but, at its heart, it's a very simple building.
982
00:52:28,840 --> 00:52:33,080
You have some little spaces stacked on top of one another,
983
00:52:33,080 --> 00:52:36,400
that then protect one big space,
984
00:52:36,400 --> 00:52:39,080
which is where most of the living happens,
985
00:52:39,080 --> 00:52:45,080
and you then take the eaves to make sure that summer sun, which is hot,
986
00:52:45,080 --> 00:52:46,680
can't enter the building,
987
00:52:46,680 --> 00:52:50,760
but winter sun can enter right into the back of the building.
988
00:52:50,760 --> 00:52:51,960
And what you do then
989
00:52:51,960 --> 00:52:57,480
is to take all of the earth and mound it up around the house,
990
00:52:57,480 --> 00:53:02,520
as thick as possible, to make it protected from all the cold,
991
00:53:02,520 --> 00:53:04,560
and earth is actually a very good insulator
992
00:53:04,560 --> 00:53:06,880
when you mound it up really thick.
993
00:53:06,880 --> 00:53:09,080
Earth, when you get down to a certain thickness,
994
00:53:09,080 --> 00:53:10,680
is a stable temperature.
995
00:53:10,680 --> 00:53:13,040
Then, of course, the winter sun
996
00:53:13,040 --> 00:53:16,040
floods in and the summer sun is kept out.
997
00:53:16,040 --> 00:53:19,080
The back of the house then has these little rooms,
998
00:53:19,080 --> 00:53:22,280
these little cellular spaces - utilities, bathrooms -
999
00:53:22,280 --> 00:53:24,360
that are buried in the back of the house,
1000
00:53:24,360 --> 00:53:26,160
where you don't need the light.
1001
00:53:32,080 --> 00:53:35,280
I love these old doors, set into these modern walls.
1002
00:53:39,640 --> 00:53:41,880
This is adorable, this room, it's adorable.
1003
00:53:41,880 --> 00:53:43,600
It's obviously a child's bedroom.
1004
00:53:44,840 --> 00:53:46,040
It's so lovely.
1005
00:53:46,040 --> 00:53:50,280
With a little place for some little tacker to sit in this
1006
00:53:50,280 --> 00:53:55,240
beautiful, fascinating, bulbous little window on the world.
1007
00:53:58,360 --> 00:54:00,280
Sonne and Lucas spent four years
1008
00:54:00,280 --> 00:54:02,880
designing and building their underground home,
1009
00:54:02,880 --> 00:54:06,520
with friends and architects Oscar Vos and Thomas Dieben.
1010
00:54:08,520 --> 00:54:11,920
The choice to build a house underground,
1011
00:54:11,920 --> 00:54:14,360
where did that come from?
1012
00:54:14,360 --> 00:54:17,080
My family name is Mole,
1013
00:54:17,080 --> 00:54:18,680
all the family living...
1014
00:54:20,040 --> 00:54:24,440
No. We just wanted to build a sustainable home.
1015
00:54:24,440 --> 00:54:27,120
From the start, we had this sketch of a house,
1016
00:54:27,120 --> 00:54:29,400
with a big space like a hole,
1017
00:54:29,400 --> 00:54:33,120
and it was my first build and I didn't want to do it alone,
1018
00:54:33,120 --> 00:54:37,640
so I decided to ask friends from Delft, from university,
1019
00:54:37,640 --> 00:54:38,960
to do it with me.
1020
00:54:38,960 --> 00:54:42,840
I was actually quite nervous also about how it would be,
1021
00:54:42,840 --> 00:54:44,400
and also about the technical parts.
1022
00:54:44,400 --> 00:54:47,520
We were building it during the financial crisis,
1023
00:54:47,520 --> 00:54:50,560
so a lot of contractors fell down.
1024
00:54:50,560 --> 00:54:55,760
It was hard labour, and a lot of blood, sweat and tears.
1025
00:54:55,760 --> 00:54:57,760
The basement was sort of extra,
1026
00:54:57,760 --> 00:55:01,080
because at first we couldn't dig in the ground.
1027
00:55:01,080 --> 00:55:02,520
Why?
1028
00:55:02,520 --> 00:55:06,480
We weren't allowed because it's a winning area, it was not allowed.
1029
00:55:06,480 --> 00:55:08,000
How did you get round that?
1030
00:55:08,000 --> 00:55:11,520
We told them it's really silly,
1031
00:55:11,520 --> 00:55:19,120
you are yourself digging holes to search for the water, 40 metres...
1032
00:55:19,120 --> 00:55:21,320
And a big swimming pool, a public swimming pool here.
1033
00:55:21,320 --> 00:55:23,760
- And they're telling us we're not allowed.
- Yeah.
1034
00:55:23,760 --> 00:55:27,600
And then they changed their own regulations and we were allowed to.
1035
00:55:27,600 --> 00:55:30,840
So then we could dig, and then we said we want a basement,
1036
00:55:30,840 --> 00:55:32,840
and a very big basement.
1037
00:55:32,840 --> 00:55:35,840
Did your client interfere with your work quite a lot?
1038
00:55:35,840 --> 00:55:37,760
All the time!
1039
00:55:37,760 --> 00:55:40,960
- All the time, yeah.
- But never fights.
1040
00:55:40,960 --> 00:55:44,240
All the time bigger and more special.
1041
00:55:44,240 --> 00:55:45,720
We had to make it possible.
1042
00:55:47,840 --> 00:55:49,320
Like starting architects,
1043
00:55:49,320 --> 00:55:53,440
they want to make a clean building with empty and...
1044
00:55:53,440 --> 00:55:55,600
- No, that's not true.
- ..and white walls.
1045
00:55:55,600 --> 00:55:58,040
- No, no, no, no, no.
- Most architects do!
1046
00:55:58,040 --> 00:56:01,320
So it will fit in all the architecture magazines.
1047
00:56:01,320 --> 00:56:03,880
- Absolutely.
- And I wanted crazy stuff.
1048
00:56:03,880 --> 00:56:06,640
Most architects are quite nervous
1049
00:56:06,640 --> 00:56:09,720
about that kind of bricolage of ideas.
1050
00:56:09,720 --> 00:56:11,840
- But I love it.
- Me too.
1051
00:56:11,840 --> 00:56:15,280
Who did you go to about the budget, who did you talk to?
1052
00:56:15,280 --> 00:56:18,400
Because client-architect budget discussions are always difficult,
1053
00:56:18,400 --> 00:56:20,840
but when you're the client and the architect,
1054
00:56:20,840 --> 00:56:22,960
how did you have the budget discussions?
1055
00:56:22,960 --> 00:56:25,880
Yeah, how did we do that?
1056
00:56:25,880 --> 00:56:29,400
We never talked about the budget.
1057
00:56:29,400 --> 00:56:30,640
We just wanted to do it.
1058
00:56:30,640 --> 00:56:32,760
Maybe you need to talk about it now!
1059
00:56:34,040 --> 00:56:37,160
But what's really interesting is you have a super sustainable house that
1060
00:56:37,160 --> 00:56:40,240
uses very little energy, but you still have a Daimler.
1061
00:56:40,240 --> 00:56:44,440
Yeah, in Amsterdam you can do anything on your bike,
1062
00:56:44,440 --> 00:56:48,000
or with a tram, and we said to each other,
1063
00:56:48,000 --> 00:56:51,560
yeah, but we're going to build a sustainable house
1064
00:56:51,560 --> 00:56:53,120
and now we're going to
1065
00:56:53,120 --> 00:57:00,160
drive each day with a 25-year-old car, five-and-a-half litre engine.
1066
00:57:00,160 --> 00:57:03,320
I don't think Mother Earth will like it.
1067
00:57:03,320 --> 00:57:08,760
So we gave her a new life, as a cupboard in the kitchen.
1068
00:57:08,760 --> 00:57:12,320
And there was this big crane to put it in.
1069
00:57:12,320 --> 00:57:14,320
It was snowing in the winter...
1070
00:57:14,320 --> 00:57:17,520
She went in through the roof, through the last hole in the roof.
1071
00:57:17,520 --> 00:57:19,800
So she can never go out.
1072
00:57:19,800 --> 00:57:22,560
She had to die for this green dream.
1073
00:57:34,480 --> 00:57:38,520
What's extraordinary is that when we arrived here,
1074
00:57:38,520 --> 00:57:42,800
we looked up at that door and we had no idea
1075
00:57:42,800 --> 00:57:44,160
what lay behind it.
1076
00:57:44,160 --> 00:57:47,600
It's a world of make-believe, but it's real.
1077
00:57:47,600 --> 00:57:51,280
It's real, and, also, I get a very real sense that it's actually
1078
00:57:51,280 --> 00:57:54,120
sort of the future of the way we're going to live.
1079
00:57:54,120 --> 00:57:57,240
Because it reclaims what it is to live sustainably.
1080
00:57:57,240 --> 00:58:00,400
But it's also...it's retained its sense of humour,
1081
00:58:00,400 --> 00:58:01,800
and its joie de vivre,
1082
00:58:01,800 --> 00:58:03,280
its joy in family life.
87257
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