Tent House is a private family residence by Nha Dan Architects
Tent House is a private family residence designed by Nha Dan Architects, characterized by a spatial concept inspired by the structure of a voluminous tent. The project explores continuity between interior and exterior spaces while addressing environmental conditions within Vietnam’s dense urban setting.
The design is organized around a series of roof planes spanning between two primary structural walls. This approach minimizes the need for interior columns and enables an open, flexible floor plan. The roofs extend over both indoor and outdoor areas, creating a continuous spatial sequence that connects the ground-level garden with the upper-level study. Circulation is arranged so that family members enter directly into a shared, multi-story living space when moving from private rooms, reinforcing visual and spatial connections throughout the house. The layered roof configuration supports natural ventilation and daylighting, with the building orientation and roof geometry optimized to enhance environmental performance.
all images by Hiroyuki Oki
Overlapping roof planes give the residence its tent-like form
Openings between the roof planes frame views of surrounding greenery and the urban context while allowing daylight to penetrate deep into the interior. Operable glass louvers regulate airflow, facilitating cross-ventilation during warmer months and providing protection from heavy rainfall during the monsoon season.
Through its structural strategy, environmental responsiveness, and spatial organization, Tent House by Studio Nha Dan Architects establishes a continuous living environment that integrates domestic life with natural light, air, and landscape. The completed form, defined by overlapping roof planes, recalls the image of a large tent, which gives the project its name.
Tent House is a private family residence by Nha Dan Architects
the design is inspired by the structure of a voluminous tent
the project emphasizes continuity between interior and exterior spaces
the house responds to environmental conditions in a dense urban setting
the structure’s district configuration supports natural ventilation
the house responds to environmental conditions in a dense urban setting
the ground-level garden links directly to the interior living spaces
the resulting floor plan is open and flexible
the structural approach reduces the need for interior columns
a series of roof planes span between two primary structural walls
roofs extend over both indoor and outdoor areas
visual connections are maintained across multiple levels
operable glass louvers enable cross-ventilation
the design integrates light, air, and landscape into daily living
daylight penetrates deep into the interior spaces
circulation leads from private rooms into a shared, multi-story space
project info:
name: Tent House
architect: Nha Dan Architects
location: Vietnam
photographer: Hiroyuki Oki
designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.
edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom
The post tent house expands under overlapping angular roof planes in vietnam appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

