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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 BE in Paredes, Portugal by Spaceworkers

 
April 16th, 2014 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Spaceworkers

The idea of a vernacular architecture (forgotten) and how it seeks to form a clear speech between the landscape and programmatic needs is something that we always admire.

A very successful example of this discourse, are the structures to support agriculture (normally function barns / granary), which in a more or less random would punctuate the countryside, as blocks of ephemeral appearance that levitated on the ground.

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

  • Architects: Spaceworkers
  • Project: CASA BE
  • Location: Paredes, Portugal
  • Photography: FG+SG
  • Principal architects: Henrique Marques e Rui Dinis
  • Year: 2007 – 2013
  • Size: 800m2
  • Client: Private
  • Project Team: Rui Rodrigues, Sérgio Rocha, Daniel Neto, Vasco Giesta e José Carlos
  • Diretor Financeiro: Carla Duarte
  • Engineering: aspp ENGENHEIROS, Lda

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

It is precisely this idea of “gravitational lightness” that fascinates us and which is based the concept of this project.

Generally, the proposal presents a tripartition according to the vernacular elements, the base, with an image of a static and megalithic mono-block, which includes the service functions of the house, the open area, identified with the more public housing programs, which explores the visual and physical relationships with the outside through the huge glass windows that transmit the idea of lightness and structural weakness sought with the concept, and finally the geometric block that seems to “gravitate”, where are the private spaces of the house. The concept of tripartition is complemented with a choice of materials that seeks to exploit the apparent weakness of wood in contrast to the black stone block (base level) and the concrete block (upper level).

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © FG+SG

Image Courtesy © Spaceworkers

Image Courtesy © Spaceworkers

Image Courtesy © Spaceworkers

Image Courtesy © Spaceworkers

Image Courtesy © Spaceworkers

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Category: House




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