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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.

CloakedHouse in Marco de Canaveses, Portugal by Ernesto Pereira 3r

 
February 25th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Ernesto Pereira 3r 

Looking at this project, it is indeed the sensations we experience that leave their mark as we think, walk and live through it.

This project was clearly inspired by the place, a piece of land surrounded by chestnut trees, incredibly ripped into the mountain, flanked by a stream that flows down the hillside and a magnificent open view of the other side of the valley perfectly nestled into the natural landscape.

It was this bucolic scenario that led to an enterprise that had no intention of imposing itself on the surrounding nature, but rather blending, hiding and transforming with it. It gave rise to the “Cloaked House” concept.

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

  • Architects: Ernesto Pereira 3r
  • Project: CloakedHouse
  • Location: Marco de Canaveses, Portugal
  • Photography: João Morgado
  • Construction and Coordination: 3r Ernesto Pereira . Arquitetura + (Re)construção, Helder Moreira, Joaquim Linhares, José Rocha, Maria José Pereira, Joaquim Pinto, Paulo Silva, Rui Silva, Bruno Moreira, Marco Silva
  • Cost: 100.000€
  • Works duration: 4 months

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

This is how the house lands on the location and the “deviates” from the existing trees, emphasizing the lightness attitude and the conservation of the surrounding nature. The two blades – the roof and the floor – open onto the landscape and are punctuated whenever encountering a tree. This has resulted in patios that introduce dynamism and movement into a house marked by a well-defined rhythm of the wooden pillars, which support the garden-topped roof. The rest is transparency, glass, which is the only solution that makes sense in this scenario.

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

In summer the dense leafiness of the trees “engulfs” the whole house, making it almost imperceptible at the same time as protecting the interior from the intense sun. In winter the deciduous trees shed their leaves, allowing the sun rays to penetrate inside and warm up the house, making it slightly more visible among the bare branches.

Whether indoors or outdoors, living in the forest or with the forest, exposed or in communion, a distinct project, which is difficult to explain but which fuels the will to live.

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © João Morgado

Image Courtesy © Ernesto Pereira 3r

Image Courtesy © Ernesto Pereira 3r

Image Courtesy © Ernesto Pereira 3r

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Categories: House, Residential




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