This holiday home by Brazilian architect
Isay Weinfeld comprises three perpendicular volumes built into a slope in Piracicaba, Brazil.
A half-submerged garage and storage area is the lowest of three elements and punctuated by a series of concrete pillars.
Above, the ground floor forms an L-shaped plan with the living and
dining space in one wing and the kitchen and services in the other.
The ground floor has a curtain wall of glazing in front of the
living and dining room to afford views of a swimming pool, while the
adjacent wing is clad in vertical concrete slabs.
The first floor, which houses the bedrooms, sits above the kitchen
and services with a roof terrace formed over the other wing.
All photographs Nelson Kon and Luiza Sigulem.
Here’s some more from the architects:
This is a getaway house erected in the city of Piracicaba, 250km away from São Paulo.
It is intended to serve as a meeting point for a family whose members are scattered across various cities around the state.
The 2,000m2 (21,500 ft2) land resulted from merging 2 corner-lots in a gated condominium.
Not only did the position of the house take into account the sloping
contour of the land, but also its orientation (North), as to provide
the bedrooms and social areas with the best possible sunlight.
The distribution on 3 floors arranged in perpendicular axes allows
the land displacement to be overcome naturally, and makes the garden
accessible from any floor:
- the lower ground, semi subterranean and positioned in the lowest
level of the land, parallel to the contour lines, houses storage areas,
the mechanical room and garage – that standing on grid pillars.
- the ground floor, laid out as an L and accessible from the street
through an S-shaped ramp, houses the service areas and the
lounge/dining room – the latter, fully encased in glass, on one side
overlooks the back portion of the land and merges with the pool deck
through wide sliding doors; on the other side, is shielded from the sun
and secluded from the street by a long sun baffle made of large
vertical concrete slabs, unevenly placed along the whole facade.
- the upper floor, a volume that stretches perpendicularly to the
contour of the land and that, at one end, cantilevers towards the
street, and at the other is planted on the higher section of the land,
houses the bedrooms and the den – the latter opening onto a large
wooden deck, build on the ceiling slab over the lounge/dining room.
The swimming pool is snug in the nook of the “L” formed by the
social and service areas, and the slope rising to the higher sections
of the land.
from dezeen