House over Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

This house by Portuguese architect Miguel Marcelino rests on top of an old warehouse in Torres Novas, central Portugal (+ slideshow).

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Miguel Marcelino extended the existing building upwards to create the single-storey residence, which overlooks a valley planted with olive groves.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

The warehouse was first built in the 1980s and was originally planned as a two-storey structure, although it has taken 30 years for the second phase of construction to take place.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Marcelino used brickwork for the exterior of the extension, then added white paint to unite the two floors.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

A protruding concrete slab divides the two storeys and creates a balcony around two sides of the building, while a similar-sized roof slab forms a canopy overhead.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

A bridge with a steel balustrade leads to the house’s entrance from the adjacent hillside and is positioned alongside a large olive tree.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

The entrance hall opens out into a living and dining area, featuring a sliced-off south-east corner that increases the size of the surrounding balcony.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Three bedrooms are positioned along the east side of the house, while the kitchen and bathroom sit on the opposite side.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Concrete walls and ceilings are exposed in each room and timber panels covers the floor.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Photography is by Joao Morgado.

Here’s a short description from the architects:


House on a Warehouse

The briefing was to build a three-bedroom house on top of a warehouse built in the 80’s, where part of the roof was made with a flat slab and a small balcony, precisely with that idea of later building the house.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Given the constraints of the existing warehouse, the house shape turns out to be automatically set: a box that rests on the existing structure.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

The rooms are placed to the east, the toilets to the west, as well as the kitchen, looking to a centennial olive tree.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

The existing balcony will be maintained and “duplicated” as a shading element.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

The living room is placed south where its south/east corner is diagonally cut in a way that the balcony could enlarge and offer an outdoor area protected from the sun and rain, overlooking the valley.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino

Miguel Marcelino has completed another recent project also in Portugal – a rural family house with red concrete walls and three separate terraces.

House on a Warehouse by Miguel Marcelino
Floor plan – click for larger image

The post House over Warehouse
by Miguel Marcelino
appeared first on Dezeen.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Portuguese architect Miguel Marcelino has completed a rural family house with red concrete walls and three separate terraces.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Located in Benavente, near Lisbon, the building is named Three Courtyards House in reference to the three differently sized patios positioned at the north and south ends of the house. “This was the way I found to solve the problem of having the best oriented sun on the south side and the best views on the north side,” Miguel Marcelino told Dezeen.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

The largest terrace is to the north and features a stepped surface with a sunken swimming pool. Meanwhile, the southern end features a courtyard with a cork oak tree, plus a smaller yard with high walls.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

“One could be quiet at the large inner enclosed courtyard with the sun and the big cork oak,” said the architect. “And, in the vertical courtyard facing the framed view to the lake with the sun reflected on the outer wall, be embraced and protected by the house in a cold and harsh side like the north one,” he added.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

The architect used fair-faced concrete for the walls and structure of the building, washed with an acid-based etching solution to add texture. ”This finishing, raw and earthy, was chosen because in such a landscape I thought that it would be better that this house had the feel like it would come out of the ground, more rooted and anchored to this place,” he said.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

The house has two storeys, with a living room and kitchen on the ground floor and bedrooms and bathrooms upstairs.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

We’ve featured a few Portuguese residences on Dezeen recently, including a concrete house in Moreira and a townhouse covered in plants in Lisbon.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

See more stories about Portuguese houses »

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Here’s some more information from Miguel Marcelino:


Three Courtyards House

The plot is located in the middle of a ìmontadoî landscape, being the best views to the north with a lake and the skyline punctuated by cork oak trees.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

The house is organized in a compact volume of two floors, complemented by three courtyards all different in size and features.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

A first large courtyard, enclosed, intimate, situates on the south side, embracing a big existing cork oak.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Next to the back entrance there is another smaller patio, for service.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

The third courtyard works as a key element in the relationship between home and the north side.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

It is a slim space with a large horizontal opening that frames the landscape and it has an atmosphere of a “inner space outdoors”, the light is soft, by reflection on the outer wall that receives direct sunlight.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

This vertical courtyard communicates with a staircase that leads to an open terrace, the last element of the sequence of spaces, patios and atmospheres that go from more introspective and private to more open and outside.

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Above: ground and first floor plans – click above to see larger image

Three Courtyards House by Miguel Marcelino

Above: long section – click above to see larger image

The post Three Courtyards House
by Miguel Marcelino
appeared first on Dezeen.