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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.

Natura in Mexico by ARCHETONIC

 
December 10th, 2015 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: ARCHETONIC

An exploration into the realm of nature and the man-made environment. A permanent duality in the relationship between man and his environment in order to adapt and find shelter.

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

  • Architects: ARCHETONIC
  • Project: Natura
  • Location: Mexico
  • Photography: Rafael Gamo
  • Software used: Autocad, 3D studio max, Artlantis,  V-ray
  • Architectural Project: Jacobo Micha Mizrahi
  • Design Collaborators: Ernesto Rossell Zanotelli, Désirée Gómez Córdova, Alfredo Muñoz Jiménez, Alejandro Rabiela Salinas, Aldo Moreno Gamboa
  • Construction Collaborators: Salomon Salame Micha, Rafael Salame Micha, José Luis Moreno Quinto, Enrique Gutierrez Herre
  • Construction: Archetonic+Cinsa
  • Structure: Ctc Ingenieros Civiles S.A. De C.V. / Carlos Tapia
  • Technical Installations: High-Tech Service, Interbrax
  • Area: 65,000 M2 / 670,000 Sq Ft
  • Year: 2014

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

The spaces originally created by man, as a means of survival, were made out of natural materials and elements found near to hand which were transformed through the survival instinct. As time has gone by and with the arrival of modernity, materials are no longer basic and elemental; nowadays they form part of highly complex and sophisticated processes.

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

For NATURA, the design process began with a quest to recover an aspect of this natural transformation of the elements, and this resulted in residential models. In terms of its form, we explored the wonderful and natural process of how tree leaves become detached and fragmented, translating this phenomenon into concrete, imitating and applying it to the “living boxes” that contain glass features, while also subtly hinting at nature with this fragmentation and detachment of concrete.

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

We gave a new dimension to man’s age-old need for shelter by reproducing this astonishing phenomenon in the project’s spaces, and by doing so we suffused the NATURA complex with its natural essence.

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

The project has six housing blocks, each with six stories. At the far end of the plot a 15-floor building contains residential apartments on its upper floors and amenities on the lower levels. With this layout we created an enormous central garden at the heart of the development, thus restoring residential activity to this area encroached on by industry on the edge of Ciudad Satélite in the State of Mexico, in northern Mexico City.

The residential units measure between 90 and 148 square meters, and in total NATURA has a total of 344 units on a 20,770-square-meter plot.

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Rafael Gamo

Image Courtesy © Archetonic

Image Courtesy © Archetonic

Image Courtesy © Archetonic

Image Courtesy © Archetonic

Image Courtesy © Archetonic

Image Courtesy © Archetonic

Contact ARCHETONIC

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Categories: 3dS Max, Apartments, Artlantis, Autocad, Building, complex, Shelter Home




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