MAPA’s XAN House in Brazil combines raw concrete with slatted timber

An austere concrete wall screens the transparent lower floor of this house in southern Brazil, while the overhanging upper storey is masked behind a layer of timber slats (photos by Leonardo Finotti + slideshow).

XAN House by MAPA

Designed by MAPA, an architecture collective based in Brazil and Uruguay, XAN House is a summer residence located near the beach in Xangrilá, a small town south of Porto Alegre.

XAN House by MAPA

The ground floor is dedicated to the family’s communal activities while the upstairs level contains bedrooms, and the architects chose to highlight this difference through the use of different external materials.

XAN House by MAPA

A single-storey concrete wall stretches across the site, from the north-west to the south-east, screening the ground floor from the street. Behind it, the rest of the walls feature floor-to-ceiling glazing that allows residents to open their living spaces out to the landscape.

XAN House by MAPA

“A summer house is a space full of freedom, a place to enjoy an outdoor life,” said the architect. “This fact conditioned the way the project was faced.”

XAN House by MAPA

The positioning of furniture divides the space up into different zones for cooking, dining, reading and relaxing. The ceiling overhead is exposed concrete, while the floor is covered with tiles that continue outside the walls.

XAN House by MAPA

Upstairs, large balconies extend the length of the floor, creating overhangs that shelter both the front entrance and a rear patio. One balcony belongs to the master bedroom and en suite, while the other sits alongside two smaller bedrooms.

XAN House by MAPA

Both balconies and rooms are surrounded by the timber screen, but sections of it fold open to reveal windows.

XAN House by MAPA
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

“Visual filters in the expansion spaces next to bedrooms allow open-air experiences of another nature,” added the architect.

XAN House by MAPA
First floor plan – click for larger image

Photography is by Leonardo Finotti.

XAN House by MAPA
Section – click for larger image

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Prefabricated modular home by MAPA delivered to the Brazilian countryside

Architecture collective MAPA of Brazil and Uruguay has built a prefabricated modular home and transported it by lorry to a picturesque spot in the countryside outside Porto Alegre (photos by Leonardo Finotti + slideshow).

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

MAPA, which was formed by the merging of separate studios MAAM and StudioParalelo, built the mobile residence as the prototype for Minimod, a business creating bespoke modular structures that can be used as homes, remote hotels, pop-up shops or temporary showrooms.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

The residential retreat comprises four modules, creating separate areas for sleeping, lounging, dining and bathing within a simple steel-framed structure.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

The two end walls of the building are entirely glazed. At one end, this frames views out from the bedroom area, while at the other it creates a shower room that can be treated as both an inside or outside space, depending on which doors have been opened.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

Huge shutters also hinge away from the side walls to reveal floor-to-ceiling windows, allowing residents to open their living space out to the surroundings.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

The base of the building is raised off the ground to protect it from rising damp and the roof is covered with plants that integrate a natural system of rainwater harvesting and filtration.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

The structure was entirely prefabricated before being delivered to its rural location, but MAPA says the buildings can also be transported in pieces and assembled onsite.

Photography is by Leonardo Finotti.

Here’s some extra text from the design team:


MINIMOD proposes an innovative, intelligent and sustainable alternative of dwelling

Starting from a minimal module, MINIMOD invests in customisation, design and sustainability. The production is carried out in a prefabricated manner and enjoys the steel frame system technology, which lets the client adapt the space to his needs, choosing among different finishes, as well as automation options.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

Depending on the composition of the modules, MINIMOD can vary the uses ranging from a compact refuge for weekends, a small showroom for events, up to hotels and inns, combining a larger number of modules. The modules are 100% prefabricated and elevated to a determined place by truck or disassembled into smaller pieces and taken to the ground for final assembly.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects

The expansion and addition of new modules can be performed either at initial installation or in the middle of the process, according to the needs and budgets of the client. MINIMOD is more than a product of design, is more than a house. It’s practicality combined with comfort, it’s economy allied to nature, it’s a unique experience of housing and contemporary living.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image

MAPA Architects it’s a binational collective that works on architectural projects in Brazil and Uruguay. From this double geographical condition, MAPA explores the limits of non-conventional production formats. The studio has originally established itself from professional and academic grounds: two complementary fields that create and shape its work.

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects
Long section – click for larger image

Project: MINIMOD
Year: 2013
Prototype area: 27m2
Prototype volume: 81m3
Prototype location: Maquiné, RS, Brazil

Minimod modular mobile home by MAPA Architects
Elevation – click for larger image

Authors: MAPA Architects
Luciano Andrades, Matías Carballal, Rochelle Castro, Andrés Gobba, Mauricio López, Silvio Machado, Camilla Pereira, Jaqueline Lessa, Alexis Arbelo, Pamela Davyt, Emiliano Etchegaray, Camila Thiesen, Pablo Courreges, Diego Morera, Isabella Madureira, Aldo Lanzi, Emiliano Lago.

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delivered to the Brazilian countryside
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Casa Pinheiro by Studio MK27

Movie: a recently completed concrete house in São Paulo is depicted as a luxury home from the 1950s in the latest architecture film by Brazilian architect Marcio Kogan.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Kogan, founder of São Paulo office Studio MK27, worked with film producer Lea van Steen to produce the movie, which is entitled Modern Living and based on a Bauhaus film by the late architect Richard Paulick.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

The movie centres around Casa Pinheiro, a family house comprising rectilinear concrete blocks that appear to be stacked on top of one another at perpendicular angles.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

A large living and dining room occupies the ground floor of the building and can be opened out to the garden by sliding glass walls, while the middle floor accommodates four bedrooms with access to a roof deck and the uppermost level contains a separate family room.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

In the film, these spaces are presented as “the latest innovations in housing construction and technology,” filled with gadgets and space-saving solutions, such as a built-in vacuum cleaner and chutes for laundry and rubbish.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

A garage is tucked away in the basement and is shown in the movie as the storage area for the owner’s classic Corvette.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Security is also highlighted in the film, as a housekeeper demonstrates how post can be collected “in total isolation from the outside world” and how every space can be monitored using a CCTV system.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Architect Marcio Kogan worked as a film director in his early career and this is the third film he’s produced at one of his buildings, following a house filmed through the eyes of the client’s pet cat.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Other recent buildings by Studio MK27 include a photography studio with two folding walls and a house where two chunky concrete storeys are perched above a living room without walls. See more architecture by Studio MK27 »

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

See more architecture movies »
See more houses in Brazil »

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Photography is Fernando Guerra.

Here’s a project description from Studio MK27:


Casa Pinheiro

The Pinheiro house is a puzzle game. Rotating three volumes around one nucleus generated not only a particular spatial dynamic, but also different visual relations between empty and full, between the private and semiprivate areas and the view of the city.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

The site is located on the other side of the Pinheiros River, one of the main rivers that define and cut into the city of São Paulo, in an essentially residential neighborhood, Morumbi. From there it is possible to see the entire valley filled with gardened houses, the river and, on the other margin, another hill, the corporate area of the city drawing the metropolitan skyline with its typical skyscrapers.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

The program boasts three floors: a garden, a terrace with fireplace and barbecue, home theatre, dining and living rooms, washroom, kitchen, four bedrooms, office and family room. In the basement: a garage, laundry room, utility rooms and a gym. The nucleus of the circulation is made of a continuous staircase joined in a structural wall. This block, which organises the structure and distributes the fluxes, is the pivot around which the boxes revolve.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

The volumes are developed to create constant and distinct relations between the inner and outer spaces. The bedrooms on the second floor look out to the pool and take advantage of the deck above the roof of the living and dining rooms. The box comprising the bedrooms projects outwards over both sides of the first box. From one side, the cantilever determines the main entrance of the house and, on the other, it shades the terrace.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

The spiral movement continues with the third box, supported by the second and projecting outwards over the first. It shades the window of the master bedroom and part of the deck while, simultaneously, creates new visual relations with the other bedrooms and the terrace.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

All of the boxes are bare concrete frames. The living room and the bedrooms have their sides closed by freijó wooden folding panels which filter the light and allow for permanent crossed ventilation. The family room, on the top floor is enclosed by glass, to preserve the view.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

The result strengthens interactions, the crossing of eye views and vectors through the garden: eyes that see the view and the treetops around the pool, eyes that are turned back to the house itself, its volumetry and, above all else, to its own life.

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Project: Pinheiro House
Location: São Paulo, Brazil

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Architecture: Studio MK27
Architect: Marcio Kogan
Co-architect: Lair Reis
Interiors: Diana Radomysler

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27

Collaborators: Carolina Castroviejo, Carlos Costa, Laura Guedes, Mariana Simas, Oswaldo Pessano, Suzana Glogowski
Team: Andrea Macruz, Samanta Cafardo, Renata Furlanetto
Architecture collaborator: Fernanda Reiva

Pinheiro House by Studio MK27
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Pinheiro House by Studio MK27
First floor plan – click for larger image
Pinheiro House by Studio MK27
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Pinheiro House by Studio MK27
Cross section – click for larger image

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Studio MK27
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BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

A bulky concrete first floor balances above pale brick walls and tall grasses at this family house in Brazil by São Paulo architect Guilherme Torres (+ slideshow).

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

The two-storey house in Maringá has a square ground floor plan, while its upper floor is an offset rectangular volume that gently cantilevers over the edge of one wall.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

Unlike the opaque brick walls of the lower level, this top floor is clad with latticed mashrabiya screens that bring light and ventilation into the family’s bedrooms, but also maintain privacy.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

Guilherme Torres explains: “As soon as I saw the gently sloped plot surrounded by other houses, the idea of this large panel came to me, to ensure privacy for both the residents and their neighbours.”

dezeen_BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres_

The ground floor is split into two parts, with a large courtyard and swimming pool between. One half contains living and dining rooms, while the other functions as a pool house with a pair of changing rooms and an additional dining area.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

Various furniture pieces by Torres are dotted through the building, alongside a selection of items by other Brazilian designers. “The decoration follows a jovial and Brazilian style,” explains the studio.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

Landscape architect Alex Hanazaki designed the setting for the building, adding the Texan pampas grass that brushes against the outer walls.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

We’ve featured a few concrete houses from Brazil recently. Others include a long and low residence near São Paulo and a house with a sunken living room and courtyard.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

See more Brazilian houses on Dezeen »
See more residential architecture »

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

Photography is by Denilson Machado.

Here’s a project description from Studio Guilherme Torres:


BT House

São Paulo-based architect Guilherme Torres has developed ideas which fuse the modern and the traditional. Guilherme’s own house, designed by the architect himself, bears a chequered wood design, a kind of brise soleil called mashrabiya, which is a classic feature in Eastern architecture.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

It was later assimilated by the Portuguese, who brought it to Brazil. This element, with its powerful aesthetic appeal, was adapted to this residence in the south of the country, and acts as a wooden ‘curtain’, allowing air flow, dimming light and also serving as a security feature.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

“As soon as I saw the gently sloped plot surrounded by other houses, the idea of this large panel came to me, to ensure privacy for both the residents and their neighbours.” This monumental house stands out as a huge rectangular monolith with two large brickwork blocks in contrast with the upper volume in concrete. A few columns, huge spans and strategic walls create exquisite fine gardens that make up a refuge for this young couple and their two small children.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres

The decoration follows a jovial and Brazilian style with an alliance of Guilherme Torres’ design, including sofas and tables, and other great names of Brazilian design such as furniture designed by Sérgio Rodrigues and Carlos Motta. The composition of overlapping these Brazilian styles with international design is balanced by pieces from Tom Dixon and Iranian carpets, all sourced by the architect.

The garden, designed by Alex Hanazaki has given the house an ethereal atmosphere due to the movement of Texan plume grass.

BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres
Ground floor plan – Click for larger image
BT House by Studio Guilherme Torres
First floor plan – Click for larger image

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Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Rooms are contained within wooden boxes inside this long and low concrete house in Brazil by architecture office Studio MK27 (+ slideshow).

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Located outside São Paulo in Porto Feliz, Casa Lee is a single-storey residence that stretches across the width of its site to accommodate a large open-plan living room, four bedrooms, a guest suite and a gym within its walls.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Studio MK27 positioned the living and dining room at the centre of the plan, where it can be opened out to the garden on both sides using a series of sliding panels. This allows cross ventilation and also connects the room with a decked terrace and swimming pool running along in front.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

The two wooden box-like volumes sit either side of the living room and accommodate recessed bar and kitchen areas. One also contains the guest suite, while the other encases a row of bedrooms, a bathroom and the gym.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

The timber walls of the boxes comprise louvred mashrabiya panels, designed to allow ventilation whilst maintaining privacy.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

The gym and sauna are located at the far end of the building. Glazed walls slide open on one side of the rooms, leading out to a small secondary terrace and private pool.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Studio MK27’s Eduardo Glycerio designed furniture especially for the house and worked alongside interior designer Diana Radomysler to plan the fittings for each of the rooms.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Led by architect Marcio Kogan, Studio MK27 has completed a few houses in São Paulo recently, including the chunky concrete Casa Cubo and the timber and glass Toblerone House, which was filmed through the eyes of the client’s pet cat. See more design by Studio MK27.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

See more architecture in Brazil, including the new museum of art in Rio.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Here’s some project details from the architects:


Project: Lee House
Location: Porto Feliz, SP, Brazil

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Project: October 2008
Completion: October 2012
Site area: 4000 sqm
Built area: 900 sqm

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Architecture: Studio MK27
Architect: Marcio Kogan
Co-architect: Eduardo Glycerio
Interior design: Diana Radomysler

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Custom-designed furniture: Eduardo Glycerio, Carolina Castroviejo
Collaborator: Ricardo Ariza
Team: Beatriz Meyer, Carlos Costa, Carolina Castroviejo, Eduardo Glycerio, Eduardo Gurian, Elisa Friedmann, Gabriel Kogan, Lair Reis, Luciana Antunes, Marcio Tanaka, Maria Cristina Motta, Mariana simas, Oswaldo Pessano, Renata Furlanetto, Samanta Cafardo, Suzana Glogowski.

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Landscape designer: Gil Fialho
Structure engineer: Benedicts Engenharia
Construction manager: SC Consult
Contractor: Gaia Construtora

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Above: ground floor plan – click for larger image

Casa Lee by Studio MK27

Above: cross-section – click for larger image

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Studio MK27
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Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Glass panels slide into the walls to create an outdoor living room at this lakeside house outside São Paulo by Brazilian architects Studio Arthur Casas (+ slideshow).

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Named Casa Itu, the building is the main residence for a young family with two children. It is two storeys in height, but most of the rooms occupy the ground floor to create a long L-shaped plan.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Studio Arthur Casas used an earthy materials palette of sandy-coloured render and Brazilian teak wood to create a relationship between the house and the surrounding landscape.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

“We always try to use local materials,” architect Alexandra Kayat told Dezeen. “We used local earth in the mixture of the colour for the facade. We tried to find a colour that would be as close as possible to tones found in the landscape, so the house would fit better in the landscape, as its quite large and horizontal.”

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The living room sits at the outer corner of the plan, allowing two sides to open out to the garden. A wooden pergola cantilevers out beside it and has now (since the photographs) been fitted with a retractable canopy, while a supporting column is concealed behind the trunk of an indoor tree.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

A timber deck stretches out along the edge of the rear elevation, where the architects have installed a swimming pool. From here, a staircase ascends to give access to another terrace on the roof.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The entrance to the house is positioned behind the living room, at the intersection of the two wings. To the right, a dining room extends out onto a patio with a matching stone floor. A staircase leads up from here to a guest room above, while the rest of the bedrooms are at the other end of the house.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Studio Arthur Casas also recently completed a golden house in São Paulo. Other Brazilian houses on Dezeen recently include a concrete house with a sunken living room and courtyard. See more architecture in Brazil.

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here’s a project description from Studio Arthur Casas:


Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Located about an hour from São Paulo, the house in Itu is a refuge for a young couple with children. A prime position on the banks of a small lake and the presence of a large yellow-ipe tree led us to create a house that takes maximum advantage of the landscape.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The floor plan in L shape divides the house in a simple way: the main volume contains the childrens’ room in the ground floor, a courtyard next to the home theater forms an intimate living room, a large living room opens onto the terrace and garden, erasing the boundaries between inside and outside.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Above this volume are situated the master suite and a gym. In the secondary volume are the dining room, kitchen and the service areas. On the first floor of this volume are the guest rooms.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The house is marked by horizontality and fluidity between the spaces.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The entry is made at the point where the two volumes converge; a low-ceiling guides the look to the external landscape.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

On one side the stone floor of the dining room goes towards the terrace, gradually merging into the garden.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The living room is at a slightly lower level and has a higher ceiling. A tree trunk dominates this space, covering the single column present in the room.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The windows slide completely and are hidden inside the walls, bringing the terrace and landscape into the house.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The wood floor and ceiling give a warm and domestic aspect to that space that is merged with nature.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

A second terrace room was created under the pergola in continuity with the living room.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The whole side of the volume is dominated by a large wooden deck and a swimming lane, integrated with the landscape by rocks that penetrate the pool.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

The old yellow-ipe tree was preserved and merges with the architecture; a staircase was created aligned with that tree to connect the deck with the first floor.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Several pathways are possible between inside and outside, being one of the most strong characteristics of the plan.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

Covered in cumaru wood and painted with a colour that uses the local earth, even though it contains a large volume the house holds a discrete insertion in the landscape, its strong horizontality in dialogue with the tree canopies that surround the site.

Casa Itu by Studio Arthur Casas

First floor plan – click above for larger image

Architects: Studio Arthur Casas – Arthur Casas. Alexandra Kayat, Regiane Khristian, Renata Adoni.
Contractor: EB Malucelli Construtora
Consultants: Systemac (Structural Engineering); Kitchens (Kitchen Project); Luis Carlos Orsini
(landscape); La Lampe (lighting);
Suppliers: G Moveis Especiais (Millwork); Mekal (Inox Steel); Arthur Decor (Sun shades); De Aluminio (Frames); Metalbagno/Deca (Metal); NPK(Stones); Altero/Floresta (Hardware); BTicino (Electric Hardware Finishings), Jatoba (Mosaic Tiles); Vallve (Bathtubs), Prima Matéria (Solum Paint facade).
Interior design: Casual; Micasa; Varuzza; Nanni Chinelatto; Atelier Ricardo Fasanello; Dpot; Arthur Decor; Emporium Cortinas; Passado Composto.
Project date: 2008
Project completion: 2012
Total area: 950m2

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Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

An entrance concealed behind a ceramic mural leads down into a sunken living room and courtyard at this house in São Paulo by Brazilian architects Terra e Tuma.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Designed for architect and studio director Danilo Terra and his family, the three-storey Maracanã House was constructed on a tiered site in the city suburbs, where the lowest level of the ground is a storey below the street.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Terra e Tuma constructed the house using concrete and left chunky block walls exposed around both interior and exterior spaces.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

The ceramic mural hovers just in front of the entrance and is a piece that artist Alexandre Mancini created especially for the house.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

The tiles display a maze of angular lines and shapes, interspersed with the occasional red dot. “I worked with a particular shape, a red dot,” explained Mancini. “I believe it points to and emphasises the rhythm of the composition.”

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Once inside, this entrance is revealed to be on a mezzanine middle floor, where concrete staircases lead up to first floor bedooms or down into the open-plan living and dining room.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Large glass doors open the living room out to the courtyard garden beyond, while a second sunken courtyard is positioned at the front of the house beside a tall window stretching all the way up to the roof.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Other recently completed houses in São Paulo include one clothed in golden aluminium and one with concrete upper storeys perched above a living room without walls. See more architecture in Brazil.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Photography is by Pedro Kok.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Here’s a project description written by architect Daniel Corsi, translated into English by Monika Sönksen:


São Paulo. In this city, which contemporaneity is able to perform the most extraordinary urban contrasts for us, living can reveal an encouraging condition.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

In search of a place where this could be experienced, the idea of an elementary residence acquires the character of a happening. Thus, as this house decided to silently place itself at the westerly metropolitan meanders, is how it is presented at Maracanã Street.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

The plans which define the geometry – opaque in grayish materiality, clear in glass surfaces or vibrant on the access mural – shows its presence like a new event around the bucolic surroundings, where curious people wonder this new construction. Its discordant geometry in relation to the traditional houses of the neighborhood surprises upon the moment when it conceals any territorial definition, admitting as an element and as a public event, takes possession of the street which allows to be perceived. Through its whole property’s occupation as it is available, it shares its limits as if internalizes the surrounding and though arises its unique place.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

More than a space, its levels gradually form a path through which outside and inside merge in a proper and continuous shape. The house discovers new possibilities to the limitations of the scanty plot, whose complexity exceeds horizontal and vertical routes which invariably leads to a new spacial experience, capable to elucidate singularities of the district’s geography.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Being in the house of Maracanã Street is being in Lapa; is to live together with its peculiarities, stamped in the expectation to discover until where its spaces can conduct us and the possibility it offers the contemplation of neighbours reddish roof constructions and the church facade which crowns the district, while the sunset at São Paulo’s horizon gets unveiled.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Entering the house doesn’t mean to set apart the city, which leads us to it or to close off a disconnected universe. Its access has to be discovered from behind the ceramics mural painted in black, white and red compositions. Entering the house means, simply to transpose a succession of spaces, now narrow, now lightened, now shady, which leads us always to new experiences.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: lower floor plan – click above for larger image

The house’s arrival happens from the emptiness, which is a viewpoint to the living space and also an identification area of its functional sections: social and services below, intimate above. Like the city streets, the lights between their spaces enlightens every directions, through big glass openings which sets against the solidity of the concrete materiality which it is built.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: middle floor plan – click above for larger image

Which way some arrives, which way some passes, which way some goes? Through the space, through the emptiness. Going around or staying, that’s how its extension is discovered. We can find ourselves immersed in its lower pavement, defined by concrete plans, by the gardens and by the backyard which shape the ambiance, or we can go through vertically until the gliding plan of the roof unveils the sky in a special instant leaving us as observers of the city whose point of view is this house’s roof top.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: upper floor plan – click above for larger image

The house is a living infrastructure. The pavements which configures a succession of perspectives is subtle protected by the presence of big glass frames. The handling of the technique and the use of minimum materials, as if it where stones over stones in its essence, confirm that Architecture can undress the present temporary superficialities and elevate only the spacial essence.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: roof plan – click above for larger image

The shelter, the protection to the fundamental, comprehend the nature into what the house is destinated and the sense it assumes, for those who are witnesses. Nothing more is needed for the contemporaneus city living. Here is the fundamental residence, unique and revealed.

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: long section from courtyard to street – click above for larger image

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: cross section through living room

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: cross section through mezzanine

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: cross section through staircase

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: front elevation

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: side elevation

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: rear elevation

Maracanã House by Terra e Tuma

Above: side elevation

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Casa K in São Paulo by Studio Arthur Casas

Brazilian firm Studio Arthur Casas has clothed a family house in São Paulo in a shimmering layer of perforated golden metal.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

“The client is a stylist and stimulated us with the task of coming up with different possibilities to “dress” the house,” explained Studio Arthur Casas.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Tasked with renovating the three-storey Casa K, the architects decided to leave existing exterior walls and windows in place but overlaid the entire facade with golden panels that are hinged in certain places to act as shutters.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

“We used a golden color to give a warmer feeling to the metal panels,” architect Beto Cabariti told Dezeen. “It blends better with the context and with the other materials of the house, such as the wood and stone.”

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Tiny dotted perforations puncture each panel and create a repeat pattern of a leaf’s capillaries.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

More references to nature crop up inside the house, where a wall of plants lines the edge of a staircase. “As the context is dense and there isn’t much nature around, it was a way of creating nature inside the house,” said Cabariti.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Living rooms occupy the ground floor and open out to a patio and pool of water at the back.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Bedrooms are located on the top floor, while a home cinema and a garage are in the basement.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Other Brazilian houses completed recently include a concrete house by Studio MK27 and a house with a mysterious orange door by Isay Weinfeld. See more architecture in Brazil.

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here’s some more information from Studio Arthur Casas:


Casa K

This house was designed for a young couple with children in São Paulo. The clients already had a built structure; the challenge for the studio was to make a large reform to bring comfort and privacy in a dense urban context.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Above: basement plan – click above for larger image

The division of the space we proposed is quite simple: garage, service area and home theater in the basement, kitchen, dining and living room on the ground floor, bedrooms on the first floor. Even though we changed part of the structure, most of the openings were maintained, which brought up the idea of covering the whole surface of the house to bring unity.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image

The client is a stylist and stimulated us with the task of coming up with different possibilities to “dress” the house, we chose perforated metal panels, with a pattern based in the photograph of a leaf. In this way the proximity of the neighbours became less oppressive and the spaces create an interesting relation with the variations of the sun.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image

On one hand the panels filter the light and the regards; on the other we created a patio to bring light to the basement and a slit above the stairs to illuminate the vertical garden. The master bedroom has a generous opening towards the backyard, where the landscape creates a small oasis within the city. A water basin intensifies the sensation of openness in the garden.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Above: long section – click above for larger image

Sliding doors allow different modulations between the dining room, corridor and pantry, bringing flexibility to the house. In the living room large glass windows slide to integrate the space with the garden.

The Studio did the interior design project and as well designed some of the furniture, adapting objects from the 50’s inherited by the client.

Casa K by Studio Arthur Casas

Above: front elevation – click above for larger image

Casa K has a discrete urban insertion, appearing as a monolith, but it contains largely diversified spaces, with rich relations between intimate and public functions, always having in mind the serenity demanded by the clients.

Architects: Studio Arthur Casas – Arthur Casas, Regiane Khristian e Beto Cabariti.
Contractor: Alle Engenharia
Consultants: Clamon (Façade Pannels); Edatec (Structural Engineering); Marvelar(Millwork); Snaldi (window Frames); Gil Fialho (landscape).
Project date: 2009
Project completion: 2012
Total area: 566sqm

The post Casa K in São Paulo
by Studio Arthur Casas
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Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Two chunky concrete storeys are perched above a living room without walls at this house in São Paulo by Brazilian architects Studio MK27 (+ slideshow).

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Led by architect Marcio Kogan, Studio MK27 imagined the house as a solid object punctured by large voids. “[It is] a monolithic volume that, in its empty interior, contains other volumes,” explains the team.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Perforated metal screens slide back and forth around the perimeter of the ground floor living room, allowing the space to either reveal or conceal itself from the surrounding garden and swimming pool.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

“The common area is therefore an open space, like a rip in a concrete box, totally integrated with the garden,” say the architects.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

On the upper floors, more metals screens can be pulled across the windows to provide privacy for the bedrooms, television room and office located behind the concrete facade.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Suspended treads rise up though a narrow stairwell to connect each of the floors and eventually lead up to a terrace on the roof.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Studio MK27 is based in São Paulo and other projects we’ve featured by the practice include a house filmed through the eyes of a cat and a collection of furniture built by construction workers.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Here’s some more information from Studio MK27:


Casa Cubo An urban house resting like a monolith over the garden; a single cubic volume housing every function and opening and closing to the outside.Each design has small, very simple rules that give the structure its form. The rule here was to inhabit this pure volume, building openings wherever necessary and considering climate conditions.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

The common area is therefore an open space, like a rip in a concrete box, totally integrated with the garden. The cube-box is rebuilt on this floor using metallic panels – made of perforated sheets – that can be opened all the way.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

When closed, this system gives the room privacy and shade. When open, indoor space becomes an extension of outdoor space.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

The other top two floors are held in a concrete box, where the project’s rules, the perforations in the cube, are continued: there are open windows in the bedrooms, television room and office, providing ventilation. Nevertheless, the cube’s materiality remains clearly identifiable.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

On openings in the bedrooms, the same metallic paneling works to filter the light. A second layer for closing is made of sliding glass panels. This entire system of metal and glass panels is completely embedded in the walls, giving the homeowners total control of lighting and ventilation.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Like its simple volumes, Casa Cubo uses few architectural materials. The façades are comprised of rough concrete – shaped using a handcrafted wooden mold – and the metallic panels – whose color is reminiscent of the concrete itself. The inside is structured by a specially designed ceramic tile floor that forms a continuous fabric in the common area.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Casa Cubo at night becomes a lantern. The internal space is seen on the façade: the dense volume of concrete is muted, giving way to volumes of internal light, as if they were extruded from the cube itself. A monolithic volume that, in its empty interior, contains other volumes.

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Project: Cube House
Location: São Paulo, Brazil
Project: October 2008
Completion: July 2012

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Site area: 900 sqm
Built area: 540 sqm

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Architecture: Studio mk27
Architect: Marcio Kogan
Co-architect: Suzana Glogowski
Interior design: Diana Radomysler

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Custom made furniture design: Suzana Glogowski
Collaborators: Henrique Bustamante, Anna Hellena Villela

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Team: Beatriz Meyer, Carolina Castroviejo, Eduardo Chalabi, Eduardo Glycerio, Eduardo Gurian, Elisa Friedmann, Gabriel Kogan, Lair Reis, Luciana Antunes, Marcio Tanaka, Maria Cristina Motta, Mariana Simas, Oswaldo Pessano, Renata Furlanetto, Samanta Cafardo
Landscape designer: Isabel Duprat

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

Structure engineer: Gilberto Pinto Rodrigues
Construction manager: SC
Consult Eng: Sérgio Costa

Casa Cubo by Studio MK27

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Studio MK27
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