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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.

Pasqua House in São Paulo, Brazil by studio mk27

 
July 4th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: studio mk27

Pasqua House is a single-family country house.

A leafy boulevard of flamboyant trees (also known as royal poincianas) that seasonally dye one side of the lot with intense red was of great importance to define the architectural design approach. A 27-meter-long hollow brick wall, made of precast concrete panels painted white, delimits this side of the plot and poetically integrates the interior and the exterior. The concrete hollow brick has become the trademark of this project. At the same time it provides privacy without blocking off the landscape, it brings different emotions throughout the day with the different shapes of light and shadows it creates on the floor as the sun changes direction, and the passing of time is clearly marked by the light that enters with different intensities. The hollow brick wall also creates a subtle relationship between the lot and the street, allowing the users to enjoy the external spaces either from the living room or the internal patio.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

  • Architects: studio mk27 – marcio kogan + carolina castroviejo + elisa friedmann
  • Project: Pasqua House
  • Location: Porto Feliz, São Paulo, Brazil
  • Photography: Fernando Guerra
  • Software used: Autocad
  • Interiors: studio mk27 – diana radomysler
  • Project Team: carlos costa, henrique bustamante, laura guedes, mariana simas oswaldo pessano, pedro ribeiro, samanta cafardo
  • Landscape Designer: dorey brasil paisagismo
  • Site Area: 2.000 sqm
  • Built Area: 572 sqm
  • Project Date: January 2013
  • Completion: May 2016

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Pasqua House has a simple and conventional program organized on a single floor: living room, dining room, toilet, kitchen, four en-suite bedrooms, swimming pool and the garage, which is at the back of the plot, taking advantage of the slope. The three main materials used in the house are concrete, stone and wood. The concrete was used on to the terrace, in the structure and hollow bricks; the stone, original from the area, was used in the two side bearing walls; and the wood, in the brise-soleil that surrounds the bedroom’s block. The organization of the program happens through a succession of rectangular spaces distributed in an “L” shape. The concrete slab, resting on the stone walls, delimits the social area of house. Here, the visual permeability allows you to see in both directions – towards the front patio and, in the background, towards the pool and garden. The other volume that encounters the slab perpendicularly is lined with wooden panels and delimits the more private area of the house which contains the bedrooms. The pool and the large deck are located in the middle of the lot, facing the two main volumes.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Large glass panels enclose the living room. When closed, they protect the inside of the house from the elements and allow for the use of air conditioning. When opened, the living room becomes a large veranda.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The region where the house is located has high temperatures throughout the year. In order to minimize the need for air conditioning, it was a crucial aspect of the project to guarantee cross-ventilation in the social area. The concrete slab projects itself for four meters from the edge of the living and dining rooms, protecting them from the direct incidence of the sun. The wooden brise-soleil in the bedrooms’ volume protects them from the direct sun and consequently helps with the thermal comfort inside. During the development of this project an unusual partnership took place between the studio and the client. The experience of the client, who is an excellent structural engineer, was very useful in the planning and construction of the hollow brick wall. Due to its length, it would not stand if it were built with common precast blocks. The contractor suggested the use of a beam on top of the wall but this solution would compromise the elegance of the hollow blocks. It was the client’s knowledge, then, that made viable the pre-casting of self-supporting concrete pieces of approximately 1 x 3 meters, which preserved the subtlety of the design.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © studio mk27

Image Courtesy © studio mk27

Contact studio mk27

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Categories: Autocad, House, Residential, Swimming Pool




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