... 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.
In the close-up at left it is clear how the water is carried to the internal gutter in the roof below. So we have an external gutter above and one cut into the corrugated metal below.
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
In the close-up at left it is clear how the water is carried to the internal gutter in the roof below. So we have an external gutter above and one cut into the corrugated metal below.
added by FERNANGE LETTONA to roofs (22 months ago)
added by Katherine Boschetto to kathbos's ideas (2 years ago)
... 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.
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.
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.