*파이브 하우스 [ Carlos Alejandro Ciravegna ] Five houses

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아르헨티나 고도바에 위치한 파이브 하우스는 (두개가 쌍으로 이루어진) 언덕을 따라 배치, 길게 뻗은 형상들을 통해 리드믹컬한 시퀀스를 형성한다. 이러한 배치는 최상의 뷰와 채광을 위한 건축적 방법론과 주어진 대지;자연을 최소한으로 훼손하는 지속성을 바탕으로 진행되며 공중으로 부양하는 듯한 볼륨들을 통해 유쾌한 공간을 생성한다. 하나의 뿌리로 부터 갈라진 두개의 이란성 쌍둥이 하우스는 기본 모듈을 바탕으로 동일한 건축적 특징을 보이지만 (지형에 순응한) 대지에 반응하며 자신들을 유니크화 한다. 지붕형상 또한 두쌍이 유사하게 박공과 경사지붕으로 이루어 진다.

하우스의 외부는 벽체, 지붕, 바닥까지 전체 백색으로 마감, 돌출 처마나 창틀 또한 배제된 미니멀 디자인으로 건축 자체가 전달하는 미학적 쾌락보다 주어진 환경과의 극적인 조우를 통해 발현되는 ***을 기본 컨셉으로 완성된다. 

3명의 고객들을 위한 하우스의 몇세대는 향후 판매될 예정이며, 나머지 세대는 단기 및 장기 투숙객을 위한 렌탈 하우스로 유연하게 운영될 예정이다.

reviewed by SJ,오사



These five houses in Córdoba, Argentina, each feature two wings that stretch away from the hillside to seek out the best light and views.
Designed by young Argentinian architect Carlos Alejandro Ciravegna, the houses are lined up in a row that follows the topography of the site. Each building has one end rooted in the landscape and two wings that are suspended mid-air.




Architect: Carlos Alejandro Ciravegna
Structural calculation: Gustavo Gabriel Gonzalez

The design stems from a desire to impact on the site as little as possible. By lifting the ends up, the buildings leave the base of the hillside untouched.
"The land has a natural topography with steep and rocky soil that I didn't want to alter," explained Ciravegna, who presented the project as part of the 2014 Argentina biennale.
"I instead generated modular boxes whose complexity was equal to the possible levelling of the soil that could have arisen in some other proposal," he told Dezeen.
Each house is made up of two similar modules, although the arrangement is not identical for every one. Roof profiles also vary between blocks, preventing the structures looking too similar.
External walls are rendered white, as are the rooftops and exposed undersides, and there are no projecting eaves or window sills. The overall impression is of a series of simple volumes.
"This not the kind of architecture you see in Córdoba," said Ciravegna. "The basis of the idea was to create uniformity in the material, but also to give each villa its own language."
"Material and colour were selected based on local possibilities, and the idea of having a minimum impact on the environment," he added.
The project was completed for three clients. Some of the houses will be sold, but some will be rented out for short- and long-term lets, so flexibility was an important aspect of the planning.
All five residences are accessed separately via a private staircase that leads up over the rocky terrain to an entrance between the two projecting wings. Stepping stones in the lawn link these staircases with an adjacent pathway.
Inside each one, the entrance block contains a large family room with a kitchen at the back, a dining room at the centre and a sub-dividable living space at the front.
The other wing contains a pair of evenly sized bedrooms, separated by a bathroom and an indoor hot tub.
"Everything was a challenge, from generating a sophisticated design that respects the environment to the structural complexity. It was possibly the biggest challenge in my professional life," added Ciravegna.






















from  dezeen


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