brings house inside malaysia nature window
Aug 16, 2025
Karl van Es

The Window House in Malaysia Brings Nature Inside

[caption id="attachment_3680" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

The Window House

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

FORMZERO

 

Description provided by the architect. The concept of The Window House in Kuala Lumpur starts with two fundamental questions.

When a proposed house is sited right on the edge of a reserved forest, a seamless correspondence between the house and nature shall become the priority of the design. On the contrary, what if the house owner has expressed no interest in the outdoor space or nature but rather maximising the interior volume as part of the design brief? This paradoxical situation is adversely transformed into an inspirational thought.

[caption id="attachment_3695" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

The window is probably the most direct element that defines our relationship with the outdoor space. When a house is surrounded by other houses, such relationship is immediately disjoined by just dropping down a curtain. How can we restore such relationship with the outdoor space without compromising our privacy?

[caption id="attachment_3682" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

To answer these questions, the design concept of The Window House departed with three tectonic approaches through the manipulation of the form and function of the window. By doing so, the ultimate aim of this project is to strengthen the house owner’s bonding with the existing context without diluting the design brief.

[caption id="attachment_3692" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

Concrete Shell

From east to west, this house is wrapped in an additional layer of a perforated concrete wall which appears like a shell. Apart from acting as a thermal protection with cross ventilation, the shell is the first layer to control the privacy. Between the house and the concrete shell, the multi-levels of the landscape are inserted in order to create an ambiguous condition which makes the landscape to appear more like an indoor space.

[caption id="attachment_3693" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

Telescoping Form

The concrete shell is shaped in a telescoping form. It is tapered at the front, widened towards the forest in both plan and section, like creating a giant window frame to look out to the forest. At the same time, the tapered front facade is projected to the street that creates a more human scale house.

[caption id="attachment_3694" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

Windows Follow Function

Rooms with different functions deserve different windows. To create specific viewing experience for each room, the proportion and the position of each window on the north and south facade are derived out of the function of each room. Instead of imposing an arbitrary aesthetic, the facade, therefore, becomes a collective expression of each room. In addition to enhancing the quality of framing view, the windows are outlined with deepened eaves, every scene is captured in a picture frame.

[caption id="attachment_3688" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3687" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3698" align="alignnone" width="1202"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3697" align="alignnone" width="1202"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3686" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3685" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3690" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3681" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption] [caption id="attachment_3689" align="alignnone" width="2200"]Window House by FORMZERO © Ronson Lee | Twins Photography[/caption]

Project Details:

Architect: FORMZERO Website: www.formzero.net Email: info@formzero.net Project Name: The Window House Lead architect: Cherng Yih Lee Construction Year: 2015 Completion Year: 2017 Type: Residential / Single detached house Built Area: 900m2 Project location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Photographer: Ronson Lee from Twins Photography www.twinsphotograph.com Contractor: Jaya Bintang