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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.

S+J House in Buenos Aires, Argentina by Arch. Luciano Kruk

 
January 14th, 2020 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Arch. Luciano Kruk

S+J House is located in the seaside neighborhood Costa Esmeralda, a private development 13 km north of the city of Pinamar and four hours away from Buenos Aires city.

Despite being almost plain, the plot of land slopes softly towards its back. As the Studio proposed to preserve the lot’s dense pine grove, only the trees on the construction site were removed in order to build the house.

The client, a group of two families, requested a house that could lodge both at the same time and that could be rented out.

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

  • Architects: Arch. Luciano Kruk
  • Project: S+J House
  • Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Photography: Daniela Mac Adden
  • Project manager: Arch. Belen Ferrand
  • Site Manager: Pablo Magdalena
  • Collaborators: Arch. Andrés Conde Blanco – Denise Andreoli – Arch. Leandro Rossi – Dan Saragusti – Darío Cecilian
  • Text Editing: Arch. Mariana Piqué
  • Land Area: 1000 m2
  • Built Area: 189 m2
  • Construction Year: 2016

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

The commission consisted of a recreation house built entirely out of exposed concrete, with minimalist interior spaces and little maintenance requirements. The brief included two en suite bedrooms with their own closets and two cabin-like minimum rooms sharing a bathroom. So as to make the social area the most important place in the house, an external expansion was requested. Also, the client asked for a closed space for beach vehicles and a semi covered area parking lot. Special emphasis was laid on the need to establish a fluid relation between the inner spaces and the exterior, which would allow a closer experience of the forest.

In order to preserve the native vegetation, the house was set longitudinally and the setback on the front and the sides was expanded beyond the minimum required by code. By so doing, the house ended up surrounded by pines.

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Following regulating lines, an orthogonal grid organizes the house’s structure and space.

The house is arranged in two staggered platforms disposed at half-height and connected through smoothly sloped ramp-like stairs and an empty space in which the pine forest becomes a part of the house.

At half-height of the entrance level and set on the natural terrain, the platform at the back houses the social area, which opens into a terrace overlooking the golf court behind the plot of land.

Half a level above the social area, the bedrooms’ platform rises on the front, underpinned by a prism lodging service and storing areas.

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Aiming at centering the loads to the smallest space possible, this supporting volume was set back and reduced to its minimum as an attempt at once to enhance the feeling that the upper box is floating and to take advantage of the semi covered space on the natural terrain as the parking area the clients had requested.

The glazed bridges connecting both platforms traverse the void space through a pines-surrounded promenade upon which light falls from the rooftop and drips through the tree branches. In this way, the forest’s vital energy is introduced into the house.

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

While both the exterior shell and the inner partitions are made of exposed concrete, the floors are made of smooth concrete. In order to emphasize the openings without confronting this material’s stony essence, dark bronze anodized aluminum was used in the framings.

In an elementary architectural scheme—synthesized in two platforms connected by bridges and green patios—a continuum stripe made of concrete swathes the whole house, thus producing a single volume, composed of void and filled areas, that at once shelters the interior space from the outside view and preserves its intimacy without dissociating the house from the nature around.

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Daniela Mac Adden

Image Courtesy © Arch. Luciano Kruk

Image Courtesy © Arch. Luciano Kruk

Image Courtesy © Arch. Luciano Kruk

Image Courtesy © Arch. Luciano Kruk

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Categories: House, Residential




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