Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Argentinean studio Adamo-Faiden has overhauled an ageing townhouse in Buenos Aires with the addition of a rooftop courtyard and an underground yoga room.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

The house had been used in various guises throughout its history, most recently as an apartment block, and Marcelo Faiden and Sebastian Adamo were asked to restore the building as a home for the Venturini family.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

The architects began by removing superfluous partitions and stripping the structure back to its basic form. They then re-planned the layout and worked out where they could add extra rooms.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

“Our intervention can be summarised in three actions: extraction, redescription and addition,” they explain.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

An extra roof inserted over the house’s old courtyard encloses the new basement-level yoga room, which is lit from above by a strip of skylights.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

The surface of this roof also provides a new ground-floor patio, allowing the family to open out their living room to a secluded outdoor space.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Another storey added over the roof of the building provides a room that can be used for guests. This leads out to the new rooftop courtyard.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

The roof of this extension has a V-shaped profile, making it the most noticeable addition to the traditional facade.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Adamo-Faiden has worked on a number of residential projects in Buenos Aires. Others include a fabric tensile structure at a renovated apartment and social housing installed on top of existing homes. See more architecture by Adamo-Faiden.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Other houses we’ve featured from Argentina include a residence comprising two brick boxes and a brick house wrapped in a band of white concrete. See more architecture in Argentina.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Photography is by Cristobal Palma.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Read on for more text from Adamo-Faiden:


Venturini House

The house is located close to the Abasto Market, transformed into a commercial centre. Like the market, the house where the Venturini family presently lives has homed a variety of different uses. At the time of the construction the house functioned as a house for rent. Its organisation responded to a very common typology in the city of Buenos Aires. Small houses were located towards the interior of the block, whereas the one belonging to the owner was the facade to the street. The devaluation of this area of the city towards the middle of last century brought about the occupation of the main house, being transformed into a tenement house.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden

Our intervention can be summarised in three actions: extraction, redescription and addition. The first of them meant the recovery of the original spatial structure. The second phase of the project was simply based on labelling again each of the spaces in order to adapt the existing structure to contemporary way of life. Finally, the last action was based in two precise additions. The first of them was the materialisation of a mezzanine floor which allowed us to simultaneously cover a yoga room in the basement and to give support to an exterior expansion for the living room area. At last, the construction of a light structure on the roof, for multiple uses, made visible the optimism that follows the revaluation of the city as a way of new crowning for the property.

Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden
Site plan – click for larger image
Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden
Floor plans – click for larger image
Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden
Long section – click for larger image
Venturini House by Adamo-Faiden
Cross section and front elevation – click for larger image

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Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo-Faiden and Estudio Silberfaden

Shimmering steel panels chequer the facade of this office building at an aluminium plant outside Buenos Aires by Argentinean architects Adamo-Faiden and Estudio Silberfaden.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

The small two-storey block adjoins the southern corner of the Hydro Aluminium factory, where it serves as an administrative block for the Norwegian metal company.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Adamo-Faiden teamed up with Estudio Silberfaden to design the offices, which feature floor-to-ceiling windows and glazed internal partitons to increase natural light.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

There’s also a terrace and garden covering the roof, protected behind a wire fence.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

A steel staircase connects both office levels with the top floor terrace. Behind it, doors lead through to the main building on each storey so the stairs can also be used by employees inside the factory.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

“This pavilion annex wants to answer two specific needs,” explain Marcelo Faiden and Sebastian Adamo. “First, to build office space for administrative, technical and management areas, and secondly, to incorporate a circulation system linking the levels of both buildings and finishing in an open area.”

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Adamo-Faiden often design buildings with terraces on the rooftops, including a building that could be either offices or apartments, and the recently completed house Casa Martos. See more architecture by Adamo-Faiden.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Other recent projects in Argentina include black-painted housing in Patagonia and a house with an exceptionally tall front door. See more architecture in Argentina.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Photography is by Gustavo Sosa Pinilla.

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: site plan

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: ground floor plan

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: first floor plan

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: roof plan

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: cross section

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: front elevation

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

Above: side elevation

Industrial Pavilion Hydro Aluminium by Adamo Faiden and Silberfaden

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Adamo-Faiden and Estudio Silberfaden
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Casa Martos by Adamo-Faiden

This lopsided house by Argentinean studio Adamo-Faiden has a pointed balcony poking out of one side and a caged terrace on the roof (+ slideshow + photos by Cristobal Palma).

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Located in Villa Adelina, a suburb in the north of Buenos Aires, the two-storey Casa Martos butts up against a neighbouring commercial building of the same height and Adamo-Faiden has matched the proportions of the volumes to tie together the conflicting architectural styles.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

The facade of the house faces south-west, which architect Marcelo Faiden explains was to bring in natural light and prevent any issues with overlooking windows from the other two properties. “This decision allowed us to cover the ten-metre-high party wall, maintaining the existing sunlight and generating long views to the new house,” he said.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

The balcony shelf protrudes from this glazed elevation behind a layer of metal fencing, creating a ledge of plants beside the first floor window. Faiden added: “From the inside, the vegetation of the double enclosure seems to merge with the patio of the next plot.”

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

A small room and garage occupy the ground floor of the house, while the bedroom, bathroom and living room are positioned on the first floor.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

The architects compare the project with Casas Lago, their first built project, which also features a rooftop terrace. “In both cases the new construction tries to create a relation with the urban fabric through an immaterial, open air room located on the terrace,” said Faiden.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Since completing Casas Lago, Adamo Faiden has worked on a number of residential projects, including designs for social housing on top of existing homes and a housing block that could also be used as offices. See more architecture by Adamo Faiden.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

See more architecture in Argentina »

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Photography is by Cristobal Palma. See all our stories featuring Cristobal Palma’s photos.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Here’s a short description from Adamo-Faiden:


Martos House

The house is located in Villa Adelina, a neighbourhood in the north area of Buenos Aires suburbs where great commercial activities, industries and housing coexist.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

The construction is close to the street in a lot where a prefabricated house already occupies the central area of it.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

The characteristics of the buildings nearby, determine the position of the new house. An industrial building generates towards one side a 10 meters height division wall that is used to structure lengthwise the house while orientating all the interior spaces towards the garden of the opposite field.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

A metal tray runs all along the structure length, becoming a shell for a new vegetation that gazes from the inside and seems to merge with the neighbouring garden.

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: site plan – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: roof plan – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: section aa – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: section bb – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: section cc – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: front elevation – click above for larger image

Casa Martos by Adamo Faiden

Above: rear elevation – click above for larger image

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Adamo-Faiden
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Núñez House by Adamo-Faiden

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Argetinian studio Adamo-Faiden have installed a fabric tensile structure across the roof of this renovated apartment in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Called Núñez House, a tent-like structure between the walls at the top of the building creates a shaded covering over the terrace and swimming pool.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

A light airy social area has been created at the top of the house, where the kitchen, living and dining rooms all flow out to the terrace, separated from it by glazed walls.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The rest of the apartment has been completely renovated, with the bedrooms spread over one floor and a rooftop swimming pool made from an old water tank.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Photographs are by Cristobal Palma.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

More projects by Adamo-Faiden on Dezeen »

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Núñez House.

The realized work for the Núñez family consisted of the transformation of an old apartment into a contemporary urban home.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The project resumes four punctual operations that try to set a relation between the existent organization and the new function.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The first one is the inversion of the separate uses of the two floors of the house.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

With the addition of a bathroom and a closet in place of the former living room, the goal of placing all bedrooms on first floor is achieved.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Which, in turn, liberates the upper floor and its terrace for a functional common space for the whole family.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The second intervention consists of occupation of half of the terrace with a light construction, which integrates the space with the kitchen, dining area, and living room.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

The rooftop of this space is used to create an extension that leads to the third operation: convertion of the water tank into an open-air swimming pool.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Finally, a shadow device incorporates to the project the irregularity of the walls from neighboring buildings, trapping a great volume of air and creating an specific atmosphere for the new house.

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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Nunez House by Adamo-Faiden

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See also:

.

House in Kodaira by
Suppose Design Office
Origami by
Architects Collective
Casas Lago by
Adamo-Faiden

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden 1

Argentinian architects Adamo-Faiden have completed a club house in the middle of a lake near Buenos Aires.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

Containing a gym, spa and bar, the pill-shaped structure is connected to the shore by a semi-circular walkway.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

The mosaic-clad club house serves a gated community called La Cándida, where the architects have already built a community centre. See our previous story.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

Photographs are by Cristobal Palma.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

See all our stories on Adamo-Faiden »

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

Here’s some more information from the architects:


La Cándida is a gated community built at the border of a route that links Buenos Aires to the seaside resorts of the Atlantic coast.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

The property is axially aligned with an artificial lake, a semicircular portion of land at its extreme west became the area of intervention.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

Confronting these conditions the project proposes two simultaneous actions: the augmentation of the lake and the construction of a pavilion isolated in its interior.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

The two actions intend to invert the inertia of each element in order to become fused with the emergence of an experience specific to this new scenery.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

Alongside the programs that configure the building – gym, bar and spa – the club house has an integrating vocation that aspires to dissolve the limits of its prints, inviting each individual to increase their relationships where it seems impossible to do so.

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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La Cándida by Adamo-Faiden

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See also:

.

Community Centre of La Candida by Adamo-FaidenConesa 4560 by
Adamo-Faiden
More architecture
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