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Tennis Club Amenities in Kremže, Czech Republic

design: bc. Petra Jablonická, Ing.arch, Martin Bugáň
year: 2018

Recieved special price

The idea of using a concrete cellar is based on the requirement to use a prefabricated structure that would allow for easy assembly and handling while allowing for minimal modifications to the structure. The basement vaulted element is typical of rural and small town environments. Its use and presentation in an unusual position, where it is not buried but free standing above the ground, allows for unusual compositions and shapes to be created.

The setting of the object is in a slight deviation from the playground boundary. This creates a better
view of the playgrounds and the building is not closed to the entrance from the street.
At the same time, a protected micro-space is created at the rear of the building, from which the warehouse is supplied and can serve the economic functions of the site uninterrupted.
The building of the tennis court facilities is made up of seven prefabricated cellar structures. The basement structures consist of two parts, a reinforced concrete tub that serves as a foundation slab and the vaulted basement structure itself. The tub is set on a compacted gravel surface below ground level. Each part of the prefabricated cellar forms a separate functional cell. The cells are connected by a corridor formed by a wooden structure and a cavity lexan. Light penetrates into the individual cells through both cellar fronts. From the corridor through a sandwich structure formed by a cavity lexan and a wooden structure and from the exterior through glass louvres embedded in the perimeter concrete wall. The floor of the corridor is formed by a terrace structure directly connected to the external terrace. Inside each cell there is a double floor, which allows the hygiene area to create a hidden inlet at the bottom of the concrete tub and also creates space for the necessary wiring.
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