Open side-bar Menu
 ArchShowcase
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.

HOUSES SANTA ISABEL in Lisbon, Portugal by Ricardo Bak Gordon

 
January 23rd, 2014 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Ricardo Bak Gordon

Perhaps what’s most important in this project is the desire to refer to the city that exists within the city – the places inside the city, whose matrix anchored in street, square and block it originated. There are many such places in Lisbon – more or less old, deeper or more open to the sky, but always very impenetrable.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

  • Architects: Ricardo Bak Gordon
  • Project: HOUSES SANTA ISABEL
  • Location: Lisbon, Portugal
  • Photography: FG + SG
  • Design Team: Ana Durão, Nuno Costa
  • Client: Tiago e Paula Viana
  • Project: 2003-2008
  • Constrution date: 2007-2010
  • Services Engineering: Gonçalves Pereira, engenheiros, Natural Works
  • Landscape Design: FC, Arquitectura Paisagista
  • Build Area: 560 m2
  • Site Area: 1.261 m2
  • General Constractor: 686-Construções Lda.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

This other city, so often abandoned and unhealthy, can be recovered, giving way to another network of places, like overlapping meshes that can constitute a regeneration of the urban fabric.

All this concerns the project for two houses built in the midst of a block in Santa Isabel, a site with an area of about 1.000 square meters previously occupied by semi-industrial sheds and with access via a small store open to the street.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

The programe mandated the construction of two houses, a bigger one meant for the family’s daily life and another two-bedroom one to be rented – all in the area of about 400 square meters for which construction was authorized, replacing the existing sheds.

The site was notable in that the empty space stood out with respect to the built, and for the vertical surroundings embodied in the façades of the neighbouring buildings, which would suggest a very horizontal building, in contrast.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

So we built a house with very regular and hierarchic spaces – the voids – around which the programmatic living spaces gravitated. A first patio, more public, receives and distributes between the two houses. Inside the house, we move among patios and gardens (some more contemplative, others bigger and for effective use) and trees which will grow here, projecting the scale over time.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

The house is almost obsessively built solely of exposed reinforced concrete. Peripheral limits are covered in green climbers (changing natural element), while the other walls and roofs are left as such, simultaneously powerful and delicate, to resist the pressure of the environment.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

Throughout these places an illusion is created in the confrontation of positive/negative, closed construction and void, which directs how the space is structured. Between “being inside” and “being outside” are the modular steel windows, less wide where filtration is desired and larger to provide a generous expanse.

Whoever goes there must enter by a yellow door.

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

Image Courtesy © FG + SG

Image Courtesy © Ricardo Bak Gordon

Image Courtesy © Ricardo Bak Gordon

Image Courtesy © Ricardo Bak Gordon

Image Courtesy © Ricardo Bak Gordon

Tags: ,

Category: House




© 2024 Internet Business Systems, Inc.
670 Aberdeen Way, Milpitas, CA 95035
+1 (408) 882-6554 — Contact Us, or visit our other sites:
TechJobsCafe - Technical Jobs and Resumes EDACafe - Electronic Design Automation GISCafe - Geographical Information Services  MCADCafe - Mechanical Design and Engineering ShareCG - Share Computer Graphic (CG) Animation, 3D Art and 3D Models
  Privacy PolicyAdvertise