A house that hides its ambition at the door. The mono-pitched roof sits close to the ground at the front, then rises steadily — pulling you through a sequence of light, landscape and warmth.
Coming next.
We gathered with past colleagues and collaborators to mark the beginning of Super Assembly’s 10th year.
For the past decade, the practice has been under construction—
not as a singular idea,
not as a linear journey,
but as an assemblage shaped by people, time, and shared intent.
To those who have been part of this ongoing making:
thank you for assembling with us.
Thank you to @seri_tasripin for facilitating the conversation!
Sam Jacob’s Ritual Litter frames architecture as a symbolic and cultural act layered onto the landscape.
This project continues that dialogue—banded massing intertwined with landscape to create a domestic terrain where art, nature, and everyday life converge.
Down the rabbit hole we go! Where does it lead? Only curious minds will know. Featuring circular openings from across our projects—windows, views, or thresholds to another world.
Sightlines, sun, and wind — all in one move.
Our proposal for a house on a sunken plot, surrounded by higher neighboring grounds, tackles privacy and climate head-on. A series of angled walls shields interior spaces from prying eyes while blocking harsh east and west sun. At the same time, these staggered layers open up pathways for the prevailing winds to naturally ventilate the home. Architecture shaped by environment, not just by plan.
A playground or a public sofa? We designed this playful mound as an open invitation — for kids to climb, slide, and lounge, and for adults to sit, rest, and gather. A space that’s as free and imaginative as the people who use it.