House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos

Architects: ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos
Location: , Portugal
Architect In Charge: José Mateus, Nuno Mateus
Team: Isabel Gorjão Henriques, Miguel Torres, Joana Pedro, Sofia Raposo, Rodrigo Gorjão Henriques, Paulo Rocha
Area: 436 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: FG + SG

Structures: SAFRE, Projectos e Estudos de Engenharia Lda.
Electrical And Telecomunications Planning Security Planning: Gabinete de Engenharia, Lda
Contractor: Manuel Mateus Frazão

From the architect. The concept for this house emerges from a reflection on the identity of Lisbon architecture, a recurring type of 6-meter-wide and 15-meter-long deep house, ending in a small garden in the back. It is a 5-storey building with two radically different elevations: one “public” in white lioz limestone (the most used in Lisbon) and the one in the back, in glass, connected by an interior world in exposed concrete, punctuated by birch wood elements.

The elevation obviously follows on the Lisbon tradition, stressed further by the windows’ rhythmic structure, opened in a span system created by horizontal strips and  vertical bars – characteristic of the city architecture. Just as most of Lisbon’s old buildings, it is a flat elevation whose expressiveness comes from its rhythmic nature and the light-and-shade effects produced with the backing-up of its surfaces. This apparatus brings the elevation a sense of time, expressed by the change in the shadows throughout the day: from a more subtle morning light – with no direct sunlight – to the strong contrasting afternoon shadows.

Besides a straightforward concern in aligning the elevation with the surrounding lines, the design stresses an obvious contrast between the block-type bottom, and the more dematerialized crest. If on the one hand the ground floor responds defensively to the narrowness of the street, combined with the fact that neighbours park their cars in front of doors and windows, on the other hand the top comes out much lighter and dematerialized: it is a space at once interior and exterior – a top patio allowing the transition between the lower building, to the south, and the higher one, to the north. Nevertheless, despite its intimate nature, the space allows a view over the surrounding landscape and to the far-off Christ the King statue to the south, along the street line.

On the back elevation we have explored the extreme transparency which extends the interior onto the exterior and opens up the view to the garden – where a splendid Linden tree takes center stage – leading the eyes from the top floors over Lisbon’s hills, the Tagus river, and the South Bank. Radically opened to the exterior, the generous morning light that floods in directly is balanced by the gray concrete making up all the surfaces.

Inside, the precision of the design, as well as the inclusion of two doors in most rooms, endows the five small floors with a sense of a generous space, and give its dwellers a strong feeling of fluidity and freedom. The constructive research for this project provides an example in which the whole structure shapes the space and becomes architecture in itself: the whole concrete structure, built with only 3 planes – two gables and a transversal plan – is set forth and designed to define the essential house space.

At once a natural and staged space, of both contemplation and living experience, the garden is expressed as an archeological site, where all layers of time, since the house was built, are present. Here, one can still see the ancient techniques that have raised  thick stone walls (often recovered from other buildings), later brick overlays, mortar or paint, as well as the stones from the demolished house that have become pavement.

House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos © FG + SG
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos First Floor Plan
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Second Floor Plan
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Third Floor Plan
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Ground Floor Plan
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Underground Floor Plan
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Roof Floor Plan
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos East Elevation
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos West Elevation
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section
House in Lisbon / ARX PORTUGAL Arquitectos Section

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Karuna House by Holst Architecture

Holst Architecture have designed the Karuna House that overlooks the Willamette Valley in Oregon.

Description

Karuna House is an ambitious sustainable design project that was designed to meet a combination of the world’s most demanding green building certifications. The project is the first MINERGIE-certified home in North America, earning the top rating of MINERGIE-P-ECO. Additionally, it has achieved Passive House PHIUS+, is pending LEED for Homes Platinum, and has reached Net Zero energy use by incorporating onsite solar panels. It is expected to be one of the few homes in the world certified by both MINERGIE and Passive House Institute US.

While achieving the environmental sustainability requirements of the project, the home successfully maintains a rigorous form that responds to the client’s programmatic needs. Located on the southern slope of a mountain overlooking the Willamette Valley’s rich wine region, the Karuna House provides spectacular views of the hills and the town of Newberg, Oregon, below. Two towers anchor the Karuna House to the earth, marking the location of double-height spaces and vertical circulation.

Wood and glass volumes appear to alternately cling to and slide past the towers. These elements contain the living spaces, and are arranged to maximize views to the south and east while graciously separating social spaces from the private and guest spaces. Sited in an area famous for its rust-colored soil, the home’s exterior palette is composed of materials and colors that reflect the tones of its surroundings. The interior finishes cast a warm minimalism saturated in natural light, allowing the owner’s eclectic art collection to take center stage.

The super-insulated envelope is designed to be airtight. Solar heat gain is controlled through the use of exterior operable blinds that shade triple-glazed wood windows. Heating, cooling, and hot water are supplied by an efficient heat pump system, and a heat recovery ventilator provides the spaces with a continuous supply of fresh, preheated air. The home’s tight building enclosure is expected to result in the usage of 90% less heating and cooling energy than a typical home.

Karuna House’s client, a leading proponent of smart climate policy and sound land use, is pursuing the project as a case study to shed light on the ways that the leading green building certifications and standards complement and/or conflict with one another.

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Architect: Holst Architecture
Builders: Hammer & Hand

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Zaha Hadid’s Miniature House Draws a Large Price Tag for Charity Auction

Twenty of the world’s biggest architects were asked to design on quite a small scale last month. Cathedral Group commissioned architect-designed dollhouses for a charity auction to benefit KIDS, a United Kingdom-based organization supporting disabled children. A Dolls’ House sold the interesting toys a few days ago at Bonhams in London and Zaha Hadid’s 30-inch-by-30-inch, […]

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California House by InForm & Pleysier Perkins

InForm together with Pleysier Perkins have designed the California House, located in Brighton, a suburb of Melbourne, Australia.

Description

This modernist inspired architecture, with deep horizontal roof planes, extensive glazing and emphasis on outdoor living is perfectly suited to the Australian lifestyle and climate.

The California house maximises the potential of its corner site with all living spaces orientated towards north facing gardens. The upper floor accommodates a master domain and three other bedrooms, separated by the stair well.

Stained western red cedar cladding contrasts with white fascias, tiled fireplaces and silver travertine that flows throughout the ground floor and external terrace.

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Design: InForm and Pleysier Perkins
Photography: Rhiannon Slatter

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Los Chillos House / Diez + Muller Arquitectos

Architects: Diez + Muller Arquitectos
Location: Valle de los Chillos, , Ecuador
Project Architects: Gonzalo Diez P, Felipe Muller B.
Project Area: 550 sqm
Project Year: 2012
Photographs: Sebastían Crespo Camacho

Construction: Ing. Diego Cueva

From the architect. The design of this house arises from previous research and understanding of the regional architecture of the Ecuadorian highlands, and how it engages with a modern system through understanding the place, tectonics and space of each, creating a tension between the two systems.

First are the traditional architectural and spatial elements, such as the courtyard, the wall, porch and slope. At the same time, the open plan and the continuous space are modernist concepts contrasted with the elements previously mentioned. The material palette includes local stone, wood and tile as local or endemic materials, and exposed concrete, steel and glass as modern materials. This mix not only expresses a formal idea, but also a structural and constructive idea that reinforces the argument.

In an area of approximately 2 hectares with a steep slope, the house is implanted in the highest part of the site, with a privileged view. In plan, the house is designed linearly, taking advantage of the views from every room. The design in section becomes important, access is from the upper level of the site to the social area, kitchen and terrace. The most private areas and bedrooms are on the lower floor.

The house is stratified into two zones: the stone base and glass box on top. The base is a stone bearing wall, where private areas are distributed. This base, true to its characteristics, is the support of the house on the ground, and contains the excavated soil for its settlement. It comes into view in full from certain viewpoints, while from others it is half-buried and seems to arise. At the back and at the entrance of the house, a large cut in the ground generates a submerged courtyard which serves mainly to illuminate and ventilate the bedroom areas on the ground floor. At the same time, it becomes one of the most important areas of reference of the house. It is contained by an exposed concrete wall, contrasting with the stone wall, thus creating tensions between the two systems.

The arrival to the house is through a steel and glass bridge that intersects with the stone wall, and opens the space to a large steel and glass nave that contains the social areas of the house on the upper floor. On this nave rests a traditional mud tile roof.

Finally, the finishes of the house are simple materials like concrete and wood on floors, concrete walls, wood deck, etc.. The lightness of the glass top volume is even more evident at night when artificial light exposes its permeability and the great nave of the roof, which is juxtaposed with the monolithic volume of the base on which it rests.

Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos © Sebastían Crespo Camacho
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos Sketch
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos Sketch
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos Plan
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos Plan
Casa Los Chillos / Diez + Muller Arquitectos Section

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The Green House: New Directions in Sustainable Architecture

Now available in paperback, The Green House vividly illustrates the emerging collaboration between stylish architecture, interior design, and environmental responsibility. This groundbreaking book features more than thirty-five residences in fifteen countries—and nearly every conceivable natural environment—designed by a combination of star architects and lesser-known practitioners, all of whom put “greenness” in the service of quality design, and not the other way around.

Product Features

  • Used Book in Good Condition

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