The N Weekday House: Precision Living by Saso Studio
- Mar 7
- 3 min read
Updated: Mar 8
In collaboration with: Saso Architecture
In A Precise Domestic Response to Contemporary Mobility. Not all houses are designed for permanence; some are conceived to respond to movement, repetition, and restraint. N Weekday House belongs to the latter—architecture defined by rhythm rather than monumentality.

Project Credits & Details
Location: Jakarta
Design Firm: Saso Architecture
Deesigners: Andi Subagio, Nirel Al-Hamid, Putri Titis Nastiti, Nur Hary, Satrio Wicaksono
General Contractor: Concorde.id
Interior Contractor: Sato Interior Contractor
Photographer: Mario Wibowo
Located on a corner plot in a residential area of Greater Jakarta, the house serves a family whose members live in multiple cities. During the week, work anchors them to the capital; on weekends, "home" exists elsewhere. This project does not attempt to resolve this duality—it accommodates it with clarity.
Designed during the pandemic, the brief was quietly radical: a house that remains efficient when unoccupied, generous when inhabited, and effortless to maintain. It is a place that neither demands constant presence nor deteriorates in its absence.

Architecture That Breathes
Rather than relying on mechanical systems, the house is structured around passive performance. Cross-ventilation is fundamental, facilitated by the site’s non-adjoining edges and articulated through vertical openings and garden voids. In the humid tropical climate of Indonesia, air movement is treated as a continuous, measured, and intentional force.
A central garden serves as the spatial and environmental anchor, drawing daylight through skylights while enabling thermal release across multiple levels. The split-level organization and central void are not mere compositional gestures; they are spatial devices that expand perception within a compact footprint.
Rainwater, often concealed in urban design, is treated here as an expressive environmental actor. Given the region’s high rainfall, the sloped roof allows water to descend directly into the garden, bypassing conventional gutters. The result is pragmatic and legible—architecture that acknowledges its relationship with the climate rather than hiding it.
Thresholds Over Enclosures
The house negotiates hospitality through spatial gradation. An open terrace mediates between the public and private realms, allowing interaction without obligation. It functions as an architectural pause—a space of reception that preserves domestic privacy.
Large sliding glass panels dissolve the boundaries between the terrace, living, and dining areas, allowing the interior to expand or retract as required. This flexibility supports both the quietude of weekday use and the density of occasional family gatherings without over-programming the floor plan.
Public and private zones are carefully stratified. A mezzanine guest bedroom with an independent bathroom ensures autonomy for visitors, while a compact home office reflects contemporary hybrid work patterns—integrated into the home, but not dominant.







































