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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.

Casa DTF in Jalisco, México by Elías Rizo Arquitectos

 
February 25th, 2014 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Elías Rizo Arquitectos

Casa DTF was built within the confines of a private residential community and raised similar privacy issues. In the case of Casa DTF the house program was resolved in three levels. The program distribution allows for a clear separation of private and public functions. The basement houses all service areas and the garage; the ground floor, which rises half a story above the street level, includes all public areas such as kitchen, dining and living spaces as well as a studio. The second level includes four bedrooms.

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

  • Architects: Elías Rizo Arquitectos
  • Project: Casa DTF
  • Location: Jalisco, México
  • Photography: Marcos García
  • Colaborators: Jenny Mora, Paola Hernández, Alma Osnaya, Jenny Camarena, Gabriela Chávez, Roberto Contreras, Rigo, González, Andrea Zúñiga, Daniela Valdez, Maripily Roel, Diana Reséndiz, Rodrigo Ortega,
  • Constructor: Ingenieros de la Torre S.A. de C.V.
  • Year built: 2013
  • Area: 600 m2

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

The house can be understood essentially as a pair of distinct volumes that enclose the most important elements of the program and are joined at the center by a circulation block. The envelope of each of these volumes responds to orientation and privacy. The front volume, which faces the street to the South, is practically opaque.

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

A large window masked by a metal screen sits on top of a bare concrete wall. The back volume, on the other hand, displays a larger degree of transparency on both floors. The top portion is articulated as a floating concrete frame that cantilevers well past the glass wall underneath, to shade the living spaces and an outdoor terrace on a stone platform. A series of wooden operable panels mounted on steel rails on the second level act as shutters that prevent sunlight from entering the master bedroom and, when open, provide a clear view of the back garden.

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

The interiors are finished with an austere assortment of materials. Marble covers all floors on the ground level and dresses floors and walls on bathrooms. Wood was used for cabinetry, doors and stair treads; on the second level it substitutes stone on most floors except for the bathrooms, where we find a combination of marble and concrete on various surfaces. Steel plays a prominent part in the material palette as well, especially on the facades and within the middle, circulation volume, where it forms the structural framing for the stair, railings and it covers the slab edges.

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

Image Courtesy © Marcos García

Image Courtesy © Elías Rizo Arquitectos

Image Courtesy © Elías Rizo Arquitectos

Image Courtesy © Elías Rizo Arquitectos

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Categories: House, Residential




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