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| Rare is a house covered completely in corrugated metal. In most cases it is used selectively for walls or roofs. This house in Spring Hill, Mississippi by architects John Beard and Dale Riser exhibits this predilection, even as the various materials work together in this contemporary rural home. |
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| The corrugated application to focus on here is the awning in the foreground. Alongside the vertical ribs of this overhang are painted red panels, standing-seam metal, wood slats, and wire mesh screens. Most intriguing is how the awning appears to be translucent. |
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| After sundown it is clear that the material is not corrugated metal, it is something else. Fiberglass to be precise. Located above a screen porch, this turn-down of the roof's high point allows light to filter into the house. In this house the application seems appropriate, because the ensemble appears rooted in the rural vernacular of the area, where inexpensive materials combine with considerations of climate. |
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| This house addition in Austin, Texas by Furman + Keil Architects uses corrugated metal as an extension of the roof over a gallery that connects the carport and the main house. This gallery becomes the main entrance, so the living room is freed of this function. This photo shows the view from the carport towards the house and the backyard ... |
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| ... and this photo looks the opposite direction, towards the carport. Here it is clear why corrugated metal is used: Because it's lightweight, the roof can overhang a good amount (it looks to be about five or six feet) with a small-sized structure. Note the purlins running perpendicular to the structure just below the roof; these are necessary to support the corrugated metal, so the ribs can follow the line of the structure and shed water to the backyard. |
| ... It's clear the architect thought carefully about the construction of the corrugated metal and how it interacts with other materials. The detail on the left is lovely. A minimal gutter cantilevers to another portion of the roof, where the gutter is internal; the latter is accommodated by a cut in the corrugated roofing. I'm reminded of Pritzer Prize winner (and fellow Aussie) Glenn Murcutt's houses, which use corrugated metal as roofs, many in shapes that capture rainwater in places where it is valuable to do so. |
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| This house in Austin, Texas by Webber + Studio uses corrugated metal generously for its exterior walls. But it does so in such a way that the material is never overbearing; it alternates with windows and doors. |
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| In the same house, the siding also gives the walls a unique texture, like pinstripes that give the horizontal building some vertical oomph. Note the silo-like cylinder in the background at right. An educated guess would be water tank. Another view of the house ... |
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| This house in Australia follows the contours of its sloping site, yet the corrugated walls touch down only occasionally; skinny stilts raise the lightweight building above the ground. Primary structure and window frames are painted orange, with the corrugated metal as a mute infill with horizontal windows. A good way of describing this house might be "industrial organic." |
| Last, what is an ideabook on corrugated metal without an actual Quonset hut? This project in South Carolina — a house and office for the architects — incorporates an existing World War II surplus hut instead of tearing it down. The sides of the structure, which contains the living and dining and kitchen spaces, are opened up with windows, so the impression of the Quonset hut is reduced, aided no doubt by the choice to paint the corrugated metal red.
More: High Marks for Reinforced Concrete Great Ways with Cor-Ten Steel Browse more home design photos |
I am not typically a fan of corrugated metal, but I definitely like how it's used in many of the photos here. I'm now considering for a patio cover, but unsure how to avoid it rusting.
http://www.corrugatedmetal.com/corrugated-metal-roofing/galvalume/
Linda Lange, Maui