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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.

The Forest House in Valencia, Spain by Ramon Esteve Estudio

 
October 28th, 2016 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Ramon Esteve Estudio

The House in the Forest is settled in an extensive residential area. A large pine forest on the plot itself is the closest surroundings of the house.

On the basis of four stone walls, we generate prismatic volumes that fragment the space, identifying each room. The interstitial area between the parts is covered by an element of wood, which acts as a distributor and connector between the spaces of the house.

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

  • Architects: Ramon Esteve Estudio
  • Project: The Forest House
  • Location: Chiva, Valencia, Spain
  • Photography: Mariela Apollonio
  • Collaborating Architects: Anna Bosca, Víctor Ruiz, Estefanía Pérez, María Martí
  • Collaborators: Silvia M. Martínez, Tudi Soriano
  • Technical Architect: Emilio Pérez
  • Construction: Construcciones Francés
  • Project Manager: Gonzalo Llin
  • Built Surface: 608m2
  • Project: May 2013
  • Completion date: April 2014

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Some prismatic volumes come out from the four stone sidewalls, thus enclosing the space and differentiating each room. The area between the rooms is covered by a timber roof acting as a hall and a connector.

“The opening sequence of the gaps of the house reflects the hierarchical order of the outdoor areas” Ramon Esteve

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

VARIOUS DEGREES OF INTIMACY

The aim of the project is the creation of different outdoor areas linked to the interior rooms, according to their level of privacy. Each room has a different height in function of their use in the developing plant, except for the volume of the bedrooms. With This set-up a cross-shaped plan that arranges the external space is generated.

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Space tour

Two large stone walls protect the access. While the visitor comes in, the space becomes more permeable, allowing glances to the garden with the pool through the lattice of the kitchen porch.

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Elements

A deck of wooden planks assembles the entrance to the house, giving the hall a very human scale. The materials, together with the raking lights through the longitudinal skylight produces a warm and cosy atmosphere.

The wooden volumes act as distributor and connector of the different rooms, while open to all outdoor spaces.

“The volumes containing the living room, dining room and kitchen, while being independent, they are visually linked due to their position, which gives the House a greater scope and transparency”. Ramón Esteve

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

The other two volumes host the main bedroom, two bedrooms on the lower floor and a studio on the upper floor. The continuous porches lengthen the rooms, by creating outdoor areas that open and extend the rooms.

“Given its location, the materials of the house are taken from the references of the Mediterranean pine forests.”

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

The masonry walls are combined with the carpentry of afrormosia wood to create a private and pleasant atmosphere. Some weathering steel lattices, operating as shutters on windows and porches, complete the materials’ palette. The shallow pool of water evokes a pond that is reflected in the housing and part of the vegetation.

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

The dining tables and the barbecue table have been specifically designed for this house, reproducing the scheme and philosophy of the house in composition of the legs.

The interior design is based on the concepts of simplicity, noble materials, colors of harmony and a fluid visual connection with the outside nature.

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Mariela Apollonio

Image Courtesy © Ramon Esteve Estudio

Image Courtesy © Ramon Esteve Estudio

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Categories: House, Residential




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