As the Co-Cube Break has fulfilled its function necessitated by gravity, unity between the celestial projections is restored in a most vital artifact that often becomes what may hopefully be called a home.


As such, GDCode's signature house style draws its guidelines from the numberless store of lines and planes intrinsic to both celestial cube projections as manifested at a particular latitude in an interplay of cosmic and local viewpoints, with the relative intertwined with the absolute.


Locally, the co-cube's direct projection guides floor and
wall design with vertical and horizontal elements of rectilinearity; while the absolute prime celestial cube projection guides roof  (and ceiling) design expressed relative to latitude.


Front and back elevations not shown exhibit rectilinear conventionality. The profile shown poses the east/west planes of both projections - with their parallelism in effect rotated, a geometric state simply expressed by circular windows.


Such windows enhance the local rotated-cube effect which tends to incline consciousness away from the limited lateral, which in turn lessens quantity of space required for comfort. Combined with the P-R grid alignment, a sense of earth’s movement through the cosmos is fostered. Inside, an open rectilinear layout is encouraged under a beam ceiling vaulting from a low cozy area to peaked airy spaciousness and a high wall of light.

 

Outside, the equatorial-facing wall leads design of passive solar schemes. Photovoltaic and HW systems are accommodated by the corresponding roof, which optimally faces the exact center of all sun positions throughout each day of the year to also maximize albedo effects. The reflected central ray poses the option of mirroring projected roofs to enhance the sense of up, provided celestial cube expression is not blocked.


Additional options that pertain to landscape and mobile artifact accommodation are forthcoming, with the latter first requiring guidelines addressed in Part 3 - Rolling Transport.