ArchShowcase 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. Villa Monoi in Playa Tamarindo, Costa Rica by OsArqFebruary 3rd, 2019 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: OsArq Villa Monoi is a holiday home at the southern end of Playa Tamarindo located in the province of Guanacaste Costa Rica. This zone of Costa Rica belongs to an area of the most arid country affected by a pronounced dry season lasting one third of the year. The flora and fauna belong to the dry tropical forest and the region in general suffers from occasional droughts and water scarcity. The house is introverted since its location does not allow for the enjoyment of exterior views more than the groves of a green area contiguous to the property in the middle of a residential development.
The house seeks to integrate spaces that are commonly individual or isolated as they would be a room, bathroom and outdoor terrace, or as it would be a room, kitchen, dining room, entrance and outdoor terrace. In this way it manages to reduce the footprint of the spaces without them feeling small and incorporates the exterior into the livable spaces. The building system of the house is non-traditional and consists of an integral structure of prefabricated profiles in cold-bent steel, this allowed a very light and flexible construction system mounted on a structural slab that allowed to explore flat roofs in a region where the norm it is to mitigate the climate and the rains with high sloping roofs. The house uses a series of systems to minimize the consumption of energy and resources, including a treatment plant for all the water in the house, which is redistributed underground to irrigate a garden with low water consumption. The materials used in the house are industrial in nature and most of the house is built with cold rolled steel that is infinitely recyclable and low cost. Passive design was used to obtain cross ventilation and natural lighting in all interior spaces where the social space of kitchen-living-dining room is not conditioned and opens to the exterior on three of its four sides. The new construction technologies and industrial materials opened the possibility of exploring and proposing a reinterpretation of a modern architecture in the dry tropics. Contact OsArq
Tags: Costa Rica, Playa Tamarindo Categories: Garden, holiday home, Residential, Swimming Pool, Terrace, Villa |