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.

PL2 House in Punta Lago, Mérida, Yucatán, México by Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados

 
June 12th, 2014 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados

This house’s terrain has a singular geometry, also is located in front of a lake, which is found southwestward. The fact that the best potential views are generatedtowards such a complicated orientation for sunlight at this latitude, results in a volume that opens to the environment but is protected to the sun incidence, generating a volume and a very special personality.

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

  • Architects: Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados
  • Project: PL2 House
  • Location: Punta Lago, Mérida, Yucatán, México
  • Photography: Tamara Uribe Photography
  • Area: 350.60sqm
  • Year: 2012
  • Co-authors: Arq. Tamara Uribe Manzanilla. Arq. Gabriel Mendoza Herrera
  • Interior Design: D. I. Claudina Peon Puerto

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

The client, a young and single businessman, wanted a modern house in which the relations with the context were maximize. From the beginning he asked us if the irregular geometry of the site and his alignment restrictions would suppose a complexity such as the house would be difficult to design. After a preliminary analysis, we answered that the idea of making a nice one floor house with all his requests and needs would be doable, but clearly the project wouldn’t be conventional.

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

The program has one bedroom, living room, dining room and kitchen, a large terrace and a pool as social area, and service areas. The program analysis and the site’s geometry were the ones that helped us to draw the first guidelines for the proposal, this followed by the search of creating a house adapted to make different kinds of social events… the client’s prior interest.

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

The house’s main access is across the terrace, following the diagonal main axis that crosses the site and from this one are unfold the main spaces; this axis also works as division between the service spaces and the served ones. The living room, the dining room and the kitchen are conceived like a single space integrated (and can be separated) with the bedroom and the terraces.

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

The service areas are located on the site’s irregularities. The main bathroom can be integrated to the bedroom when the bed’s bedside opens, so the whole space turns into a semi-social area in which you can enjoy the view, watch TV, etc…

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Since the main view of the house (to the lake) has southwest orientation, we created a great wall that works as a protection to the sun and allows a complete visual integration with the context through a lower window. For this it was needed to generate air chambers thermally isolated… thereby, taking advantage that the client is a partner of a company of steel structures, we proposed a concrete block wall covered with steel panels that generates multiple air chambers and shadows (by being embossed). This way are generated three air chambers across the wall… obviously it helps significantly to thermal comfort, also generates an element of significant sculptural presence.

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

The basement of the houses is ”sculpted” in a way that generates different levels and the body of water. This body of water generates the pool, the water mirror on the access and a water canal that goes inside the house –crossing it- and coming out adjoin the main bathroom. In this way the water becomes a fundamental element in the composition that gives sense to many areas and allows that through this you can get to practically any space.

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Tamara Uribe Photography

Image Courtesy © Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados

Image Courtesy © Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados

Image Courtesy © Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados

Image Courtesy © Seijo Peón Arquitectos y Asociados

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