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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

PEDROSO HOUSE in Buenos Aires, Argentina by BAK Arquitectos

 
October 29th, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: BAK Arquitectos

This work is the result of a process that began in 2004 with the construction of a summer house in the forest of Mar Azul in order to take advantage of this intervention opportunity in a site of significant landscape values to propose design alternatives that take under consideration the protection of the natural environment as an unavoidable premise.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

  • Architects: BAK Arquitectos
  • Project: PEDROSO HOUSE
  • Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Photography: Gustavo Sosa Pinilla
  • Design and Project Management: María Victoria Besonias, Luciano Kruk
  • Collaborators: Diorella Fortunati
  • Land Area: 333 m2
  • Built Area: 95 m2
  • Completion date: 2012

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

The answer was an architecture proposal of minimums resources in the materials and in form, not only as an aesthetic solution but as an ethical principle of recovery the rational use of the different resources available. This stripped-back architecture should be incorporated to the landscape, seeking to be part of the environment that already exists

Thus, it was decided that an outer skin made by two materials: glass and concrete, resolve the integration with the landscape and gives us an answer to the Functional, Formal and Structural issues of finishing and maintenance.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

An aesthetic-constructive proposal as prototype

The proposal that our studio has been doing in the forest of Mar Azul, so concerned in taking part in this environment that originates it, and so far from the stereotypes of the village, has found wide acceptance. There are several commissions for houses with the special request to repeat the same aesthetic constructive solution and that appreciate our proposal of a more relaxed housing.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

This is certainly very gratifying for us but, in turn, raises the question of how to resolve the issue of repetition in a expressly required materiality proposal. The conclusion is that, if the solution resolves with solvency both integration with its surroundings and the aesthetical uses and maintenance’s requirements of the clients, it seems logical and ethically correct to keep repeating this materiality proposal as a prototype focusing, with each new assignment, in suiting specific applications demanded by the client and the singularities of the concerned area’s cutout. Thus, the purpose of each new project would be to install increasingly with more strength – assisted by its importance-the idea that what is built in the forest cannot break the landscape environment unit, with emphasis on finding ways to transform every house in a “nest or burrow”.

With these concepts was conceived and built the Pedroso House.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

MEMORY

By Maria Victoria Besonías

The place

It is a small-scale terrain on a corner located in the forest of Mar Azul, whose particularities are: its small size, the concentration of forestry (pine trees of great size) at the near end of the corner and an abrupt difference between this sector level (the highest of the lot) and the opposite end of 2.50 meters. Another important fact is that only the longest side of the lot has access to street level, facing a sector without trees and abundant pastures so that on this front the lot is too exposed to the street view.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

The commission

The order of commissioners (a married couple with an older child) was a two bedroom house which did not exceed 100m2, designed to be used primarily in the summer and occasionally during the year. It must have two bedrooms, two baths with minimum measures and a common use space (with integrated kitchen) as generous as possible. Was particularly emphasized the need of important outdoors expansions. It was also required a deposit for saving various beach items.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

The proposal

It is certainly the peculiarity of lot which gives singularity to this home.

The topography and the quantity, quality and location of the trees have been defining issues of the two key project decisions: first, locating the house trying to preserve the totality of the existing trees, and therefore parallel to the longer side reachable from one of the streets and, second, to elevate the social area and access to the house regarding the street to achieve privacy and to better relate with the highest point of the lot.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

As a result of these decisions seemed appropriate to solve the bedrooms on two floors, each about half level of the social area and located perpendicular to it. The house is thus defined by two volumes, each embedded and forming an L, which encloses expansions at different levels. This way, all the rooms in contact with the ground are prolonged to the outside by decks at different heights related to each other with a concrete outdoor staircase.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

The functional organization

You access the main level of the house saving a slope through a concrete staircase. Once crossed the front door, and from a small entrance hall, you see two sections of stairs leading, half level above, to one of the bedrooms and a shared bathroom and, half level down and half buried in the dune, the main bedroom with an area to be used as a desk and a bathroom, also shared. From this room you get out to a courtyard and ascend via a stairway to the expansion of the main floor and, from there, to the most elevated and wooded area of the lot. The social area of the house is frankly open to this expansion and with views through the kitchen sector into the woods, while remains protected from the street views by a low opening along the entire front.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

Construction

The house is constructed of three basic materials: exposed concrete, glass, enclosure beams and pine wood in the outdoor decks.

The slabs of the different volumes are supported by walls and exposed concrete reversed beams, and are finished with a minimum slope in order to produce a faster rainwater runoff. It was used the same concrete of the other works in Mar Azul (H21 with fluidizer) a mixture with low amount of water that when forge create a more compact concrete. The few hollow brick internal partitions are plastered and painted and the floors are of concrete screed cloths divided by plates of aluminum. The openings are of dark bronze anodized aluminum. The heating system, since there is no natural gas in the area, is solved by combining salamander, bottled gas stoves and electric stoves.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

Furniture

Except the queen size bed, the armchairs and chairs, the other equipment of this house is solved in concrete. Even the secondary bedroom beds are perforated cantilever slabs.

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

Image Courtesy © Gustavo Sosa Pinilla

Image Courtesy © BAK Arquitectos

Image Courtesy © BAK Arquitectos

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Category: House




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