The architectural form of the villa divides the villa products into five categories: single-family villa, townhouse, double villa, stacked villa and aerial villa


1. Independent villa.


A single-family villa generally refers to a single courtyard with an independent space, a private garden territory in the middle and a basement below, which is a kind of independent house with strong privacy, which is shown as an independent space around the upper and lower parts.



Generally, there are green spaces, courtyards, swimming pools, pavilions, basketball courts and so on around the house. This type of villa has the longest history, has strong privacy and a high market price, and is also the ultimate form of villa construction.



2. Townhouse.


Townhouses usually have private yards, terraces and garages. It is composed of three or more unit houses, a row of two to four floors connected, each unit sharing an exterior wall, a unified graphic design and a separate portal.


3. Double villa.


It is the intermediate product between the team villa and the single-family villa, a single-family villa composed of two units of villas, with a wide outdoor space.



4. Stack the villa.


The stacked villa is an extension of the townhouse, which lies between the villa and the apartment. It is generally composed of multi-storey villa duplex houses superimposed together. It is usually a four-story building with an attic.



It is mainly superimposed by the villas on the second to third floors of each unit.


5. Aerial villa.


The aerial villa, which is also known as the "aerial attic", is a luxury mansion at the top of the high level. It is generally understood that it is a large duplex/jump house with a villa shape built on the top of an apartment or high-rise building.



The aerial villa has the advantages of good geographical location, broad field of vision, transparency and so on.


Many people have their colour preferences, some people not only like to wear their colour clothes, even houses like their own colour of the exterior walls, such as white architecture, as early as the 1970s or so the most active.



As the godfather of the White School, Richard Meier has been good at using white to create pure architectural space from the beginning of his architectural career. For him, white is not only a colour but also the best medium for the integration of light and shadow, emptiness and reality.



In 1970, Richard Meyer, Michael Graves, Charles Gasmi, Peter Eisenman, John Hejduk and others formed the New York five. Their special style is all the rage in the American architecture industry. Among them, Meyer's preference for white is particularly prominent, even to the point of paranoia-almost all the buildings designed by him are white.



The more famous white buildings are the glittering white houses on Santorini, Bodrum apartments, and Villa Los Limoneros in Spain.