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Project summary
AA Chalet Extension
Zaarour, Lebanon — 1800m
At 1800 meters above sea level, where silence is shaped by wind and light shifts with the mountain sky, an existing 1994 chalet was not replaced — it was reawakened.
This project is a transformation of memory into presence.
The original white stone structure stood as a silent alpine object. Solid. Cold. Introverted.
The intervention sought not to erase it, but to reveal its latent potential — to inject warmth, depth, and architectural tension into an inherited shell.
A fair-faced concrete frame anchors the entrance, grounding the composition with gravity and calm. From within, a suspended balcony exposes the stair’s mid-landing — turning circulation into theatre. Movement becomes visible. Arrival becomes narrative.
Vertical HPL planes introduce tactility against the mineral rigidity of stone. Wood tones soften the mass. Concrete volumes float above parking, articulated through vertical rhythms that filter light and shadow. The façade shifts from static to layered — from object to composition.
The house is no longer a singular mass; it becomes an orchestration of suspended elements and grounded planes.
The transformation extends beyond walls.
The external fence was pulled inward, creating a threshold landscape — an in-between realm where anticipation replaces immediacy. The villa retreats slightly, allowing greenery to mediate between road and dwelling. A circular roundabout slows movement, dignifies arrival, and reinforces privacy.
Trees are not decorative — they are spatial devices.
Some cast shade over cars.
Others shelter reception moments under mountain daylight.
The landscape stretches beyond the boundary, projecting luxury before entry.
Internally, the spatial logic was entirely revisited:
A redesigned staircase, the integration of an elevator core, a new master suite suspended above, and a complete reconfiguration of interior spaces redefined daily life within the chalet.
The project does not mask its history.
It converses with it.
It demonstrates that architecture is not always about building anew.
Sometimes, it is about carefully shifting mass, reframing light, and allowing warmth to inhabit what once felt inert.
Here, at altitude, the chalet breathes again.
Stone meets wood.
Weight meets suspension.
Memory meets intention.
An unexpected contextual transformation — rooted in place, yet reimagined for contemporary mountain living.