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News / Porous white brickwork facade enfolds renovated 1980s terrace house in Kuala Lumpur

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6IX Design Office Reconfigures a Kuala Lumpur Terrace House

 

Teresformasi is a renovation project of a 1980s terrace house in Melawati, Kuala Lumpur, designed by 6IX Design Office. Positioned near the Bukit Tabur Quartz Ridge, the project reinterprets a common intermediate-lot terrace home through spatial reprogramming and material continuity. Its name combines teres (terrace) and transformasi (transformation), reflecting its focus on updating an existing typology for contemporary Malaysian living.

 

The design centers on an airwell that acts as the primary organizing element, distributing daylight and natural ventilation throughout the interior. Circulation and room arrangements are structured around this void, employing a clear served-and-servant hierarchy. Communal areas such as the living room and kitchen are configured as open, interconnected spaces, while private and service areas remain compact and efficient.

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Teresformasi renovates a 1980s terrace house in Melawati, Kuala Lumpur 

6IX Uses Brick, Timber, and Concrete for the transformation

 

The design team selects the materials for both their environmental performance and spatial coherence. Brick, timber, and concrete form the main palette, with recycled chippings incorporated into the brickwork to create a terrazzo-like finish. These materials allow for durability and contribute to passive thermal moderation. A secondary facade skin further reduces heat gain while maintaining access to natural light.

 

The project maintains the character of the original terrace-house form while addressing contemporary functional requirements. Its approach demonstrates how existing housing stock can be adapted through targeted spatial adjustments rather than expansion. For 6IX Design Office, Teresformasi serves as an exploration of incremental transformation and the architectural potential of everyday residential structures.

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the project reinterprets a typical intermediate-lot terrace home

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material choices contribute to passive thermal moderation

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porous white brickwork filters tropical light into a play of breeze and shadow

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a secondary facade skin helps reduce heat gain

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soft daylight streams into the living room, casting a luminous glow that lifts the entire home

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daylight and natural ventilation circulate through the interior via the airwell

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brick, timber, and concrete define the project’s material palette

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open communal spaces connect the living room and kitchen

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the customized dining table becomes a refined centerpiece

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the customized dining table becomes a refined centerpiece

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Copyright © 2026  |  All rights reserved
Any descriptions and images herein are for illustration purpose and subject to further change or revision.

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