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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 Brazilian House – Six 1 Eight 8 in Brasília, Brazil by Debaixo do Bloco Architecture

 
February 15th, 2017 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Debaixo do Bloco Architecture

In a house built by the master of Architecture in wood, Zanine Caldas the office Debaixo do Bloco Architecture had the role of requalifying the residence. Built in Brasilia in 1988, with 3.800 m², it has a privileged view where it is possible to see the main architectonic works of the capital of the country.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

  • Architects: Debaixo do Bloco Architecture
  • Project: The Brazilian House – Six 1 Eight 8
  • Location: Brasília, Brazil
  • Photography: Joana França
  • Furniture: Arquivo Contemporâneo, Tidelli, Dessine, Pedro Ivo
  • Areas: 3.800,00 m²
  • Project of the Year: 2016

Image Courtesy © Joana França

The initial idea of ​​the project was to maintain the identities of Zanine’s trait along with iconic elements of the Brazilian house. With that its apparent structure in wood was maintained to exalt the symmetry and to be the main aesthetic and architectonic element. It is a consequence of the design of the roof where it is clear in the plants that its structure is defined with harmony between the pillars beams and roof of the residence.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

The interventions appear in the openings of more frames to privilege the view and the lighting that invades the surroundings, an escape of the city without losing of sight of. The excess of glass from all angles is purposeful is that it creates a harmony between architecture and nature and causes the areas to undergo a constant mutation. The glass walls make the house have different colors as time passes, Dawn | Sunset | Dusk, three possible scenarios during the day.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

The floor remained the original green ston ardosia, plus a way to bring the exterior to the interior of the house, so that when the doors are open is the impression there is no limit between one and another becoming a large balcony, typical feature of the Portuguese house.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

The timbers were once again the natural shade that had been lost with the varnish applications, frames that were once fixed now flip as another natural ventilation option that along with the roof eave brings the optimum thermal comfort to a fully translucent environment.

Already the furniture is an exaltation the modernist architecture and the national design in raw tones mixed with stone and natural fabrics

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Iconic pieces by Niemeyer and Lina Bo Bardi fill the space with more contemporary designers.

The art is on account of the local Pedro Ivo that superimpose dramatic images, next to a palette of colors that marry the rusticity of the environments that only have hydraulic tiles and exposed bricks as a coating.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Already the mezzanines that are in the adjacent of the work. On one side it is open to compose with collective areas. Where you have a new view – aerial – and in a sense it integrates with common space, Room | Kitchen | Dinner, the connection becomes visual and dynamic when one has meetings with friends that hour play pool while the others enjoy to dinner or kitchen. Ordered for the young couple of customers who had how to receive one of the basics points for the renovation.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

In the isolated mezzanine are the suite and office, that use walls of 2.50 cm without touching the lining and searched with apparent bricks. One of the reasons the office stays in this same sector was the pleasure of being able to work with the privileged view that the land offers.

In the external area, the giant puffs give color and contrast between the floor of the pirenópolis stone, typical of the cerrado.

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Image Courtesy © Joana França

Debaixo do Bloco – Under the Block

After passing the Lusophone University of Lisbon, has acquired experience with restoration, rehabilitation and reform and unite the traditional with the contemporary minimalist, consistent with the region and without forgetting the ties with the customer. In Brasilia, he underwent very important offices. Currently it works that contextualize its design with modernism of Brasilia through BLOCK UNDER office. It is also writer and critic of architecture, with texts in magazines, books and national and international sites published in countries like London, China, Japan, Belgium, Switzerland, Mexico, Spain, France, Russia and Germany. – The office of the name came from the term used by many of the capital’s residents “under the block.” This everyday term is a result of the free spaces created by stilts. – Element of modernist architecture responsible for the new way to enjoy and walk around the city)

Image Courtesy © Debaixo do Bloco Architecture

Image Courtesy © Debaixo do Bloco Architecture

Image Courtesy © Debaixo do Bloco Architecture

Image Courtesy © Debaixo do Bloco Architecture

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Categories: Facade, House, Interiors, Residential




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