Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

The architect of  this Portuguese residence describes it as a grey house with a black backpack (photos by Fernando Guerra).

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Located in a coastal town outside Porto, the Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez comprises two separate buildings, divided by a private courtyard.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Grey panels clad the lower two floors of the three-storey entrance building, while the ‘black backpack’ is an overhanging rectangular top floor.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

The black panel-clad facade of the smaller rear building is decorated with a pattern of fork-shaped indentations, which are intended to resemble a tree.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Kitchens, living rooms and bathrooms are contained within both sides of the house, although the front building also provides a garage, a dining room and two bedrooms.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Portuguese photographer Fernando Guerra has shot a number of beautiful houses – see our earlier stories about one with gaping chasms in the roof and another with four courtyards cut into its asymmetrical volume.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Here’s some more text from the architect:


Frei Sebastião House in Póvoa de Varzim

The challenge asserted itself. A teacher couple acquired two tiny plots of land in the centre of town where they intended to build a home. Their intentions were bold.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

A little place where they could have everything and be close to eve- rything and everyone. The first option was to join the two plots, but bureaucra- cy nipped it in the bud.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

In such cases, urban regulations at the time imposed such low construction indices that only one floor could be built. Somewhat ridiculous considering the plots are surrounded by buildings of seven storeys or more on the adjacent main avenue of the city.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Therefore, the project’s premise was to maintain the two autonomous plots to permit the building of two dwellings that complement each other, each with two floors and a transitional third that confronts the neighbouring buildings and which stands in conformity with current regulations.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Thus, the larger plot would comprise the actual dwelling while the other, much smaller, building would provide complementary areas to the main dwelling, including a workroom for tutoring small groups of students, mindful that all applicable requirements should be guaranteed as for any independent dwelling.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Thus, the idea came about for two buildings joined by an open interior space that, without any physical barrier, contains a tranquil courtyard with a grill.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

The large glazed facades in the rear reflect light, creating moving reflections among the facades that animate the space and minimize the impact of the adjacent building’s volume that faces south towards both plots and seems to want to stifle them.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

It was necessary to make the spaces liveable and breathable. Light would have to invade the rooms naturally. In the main house, the entryway patio that forms the garage was the key to solving all the imposed constraints and requirements.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

In this way, it is camou- flaged, not visible from the street, and serves various functions: as a parking space, an access point to the plot’s interiorized house, maintaining a distance between people and the street, and even as a patio that permits the exten- sion of the kitchen to the outside.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

The porch, created by the body of the first floor, with an elevation equal to two floors, creates a more secluded area in the courtyard, allowing it to be used even on rainy days.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

And thus, we have the multifaceted and internalized experience of the patio/garage/access area, separated from the street only by the garage door whose surface is concealed within the facade.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

Inside, each room is reduced to the allowable minimum, but remains functional.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

In terms of volume, the dwelling evolves into the equivalent of two floors, upon which rests the volume making up the third floor, which es- tablishes itself as a container/TV that also stands out due to its black exterior.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

The second dwelling presented a major challenge. It started from the assump- tion that this building, as a separate and complementary entity to the first, should only open up to the back courtyard and communicate with the main dwelling and the courtyard, turning its back to the street and apartment tower that almost devours its surroundings.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

But turning its back was intended to be a friendly gesture, covered in black, and for a bit of irony, reproduce, through the interplay of ceramic and stainless steel sheets, the existing tree in the still empty adjacent plot.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

For the street on this side, only a necessary link, an entry door, was created, camouflaged in the geometry of the facade.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

In turn, the rear elevation is entirely enclosed in glass, and all rooms enjoy the west-facing orientation, the only possible point of entry for light. Inside, the configuration of the dwelling arose from resolving the location and layout of the staircase.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

The house, resulting from the combination of the two buildings, makes the most of the courtyards and their functional capabilities. It assigns various uses to the outdoor spaces. They are spaces upon spaces to be used according to the occasion of the moment, so that something very small is converted into something very big.

Frei Sebastião House by Arsónio Fernandez

And suddenly, we have everything, and the answer is simple, everything works, everything is there. The minimum reduced to a minimum can, after all, be huge! To unite all this diversity we have the language of architecture, the grey house with a black backpack complemented by the black glazed house with a sculpted tree on its back.

Tree of Life Chapel by Cerejeira Fontes

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

Portuguese architects Cerejeira Fontes inserted this slatted timber chapel inside a school for friars in Braga, Portugal (photos: Nelson Garrido).

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

An opening in the corner of the rectangular Tree of Life Chapel leads visitors into a faceted interior, where an altar provides a place for individual prayer.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

Gaps between the wooden beams allow them to function as shelves for storing bibles and other items.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

A jagged opening in the ceiling of the chapel creates a window for anyone standing on the mezzanine above.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

Some other popular chapels we’ve published include a boulder-shaped mausoleum and a seaside temple – see more stories about places of worship here.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

Here’s some text about the project from the architects:


Tree of Life Chapel- Conciliar Seminary of Braga

The intervention strategy results on the insertion of a Chapel at the Seminary of St. James. It is a volume released into the antechamber of the Seminar which takes for its centrality. The design of this project-”body” wants this to be a unique structure, balanced and visible, making a piece with this exceptional presence within the building.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

After outlining the vision of the sacred space that surrounds this body, we look for a proposal to absorb the religious character of the set, creating spaces and environments that promote a spirit of inwardness, reflection and retreat thus maintaining the same language.

The design of the new volume is articulated to the pre-existence, creating some openings and new forms of perception of the surrounding area. This semi-compact body is distinguished by the existing because of the form but is completed in symbolism.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

The space surrounding the new volume is assumed as a time of transition. The aim of the project proposal is to create curiosity of those who wander there, inviting them to walk in his direction.

Walking along the Seminar we are faced with a rigorous “quiet” imposed by the rhythmic position of the access doors to the rooms. It was the intention of the proposal, break the rigidity designing an access door to the chapel in one of its corners, coinciding with the center of the antechamber. Thus, a subtle gesture drew an element with unique characteristics. This design is not in any way due to chance or the result of purely formal constraints and is purely aesthetic, but rather a consequence of the fact giving another dimension to the very concept of space causing a special attention and symbolism.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

The internal layout of the chapel was designed taking into account two levels of appreciation and two types of vision. These moments distinct but closely related, refer to the celebration of the word space and the area of the Eucharistic celebration. These two moments are given by the asymmetry between the ambo and the altar.

Inside also reserves an area for the celebration of the word, which appears as an element of surprise, giving a moment of mystery when they approach. This space for individual prayer can be visible from common space of community prayer and vice versa, by the imposition of blades on the walls surrounding it. This constant relationship between the interior and exterior conveys feelings of permeability and “expands” the space visually while giving some privacy visible on the outside.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

The structure of the chapel is designed by hand, developing in almost sculptural contours coated wooden blades that create moments of opening, allowing light to filter the power from inside to outside and vice versa giving greater dignity to the structural elements a result of manual labor. Banks arise from the excavation walls, as if it were a cave.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

The culmination of this composition unfolds horizontally, with moments of rupture, which is drawn freely through a single gesture, a body. It is like a hug, an arm embracing something that is precious – the Chapel.
In short, the proposal surprises by the simplicity of its complexity. Peacefully framed in the pre-existence, is part of the history of religious architecture, which enables innovation in continuity, showing that the new architectural styles are able to belong to the Christian architectural tradition.

Chapel Tree of Life by Cerejeira Fontes Arquitectos

Architecture – Cerejeira Fontes arquitectos (António Jorge Fontes, Asbjörn Andresen, André Fontes)
Location: Braga Portugal
Project year: 2010
Construction year: 2010
Finished year: 2010

House in Leiria by ARX

House in Leiria by ARX

Residents have to go careful on the roof terrace of this Portuguese house, where gaping chasms drop down to basement courtyards two floors below.

House in Leiria by ARX

Designed by Lisbon studio ARX, the concrete house is situated outside the city of Leiria and comprises two floors, one of which is sunken into the ground.

House in Leiria by ARX

Kitchens and utility rooms in this basement surround the two lower courtyards, while ground floor balconies and terraces overlook them from above.

House in Leiria by ARX

A large open-plan living room is located on this ground floor, as are bedrooms that open out to a private L-shaped garden.

House in Leiria by ARX

An external staircase leads up from one balcony to the roof, which offers a panoramic view of the city skyline beyond.

House in Leiria by ARX

ARX also designed another house with courtyards cut out from the roof, which was popular on Dezeen back in July – see the story here and see more projects in Portugal here.

House in Leiria by ARX

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

House in Leiria by ARX

Here are some more details about the project from ARX:


House in Leiria

The house is located in a “typical” peripheric urbanization of Pousos, a parish of the municipality of Leiria.

House in Leiria by ARX

Situated east of the city and at high ground, it works as a sort of panoramic belvedere over Leiria.

House in Leiria by ARX

So as to assure for more space and complete access to the faraway view, the owners also bought the three lots ahead, over the “cliff”, that were later gathered in a single lot.

House in Leiria by ARX

Although each lot allowed for the construction of a basement and two more storeys, usually compacted and isolated in the centre of the lot, this assemblage allowed the possibility of having a lower house, which “embraced” flatter portions, with garden space.

House in Leiria by ARX

When we went to the place the first time, the streets surrounding the lot had already been made and, because of the earth displacement necessary for the street making, the land rose suddenly, starting from the sidewalk, like a suggestive construction of a topographic nature.

House in Leiria by ARX

On the surroundings, all the neighbour houses were already built and “circled” the lot in an “L” shape.

House in Leiria by ARX

The conception of the house emerges directly from the way we observed this reality.

House in Leiria by ARX

Dealing with a single-family house of large dimensions for local standards, we chose to divide the construction volume in two parts.

House in Leiria by ARX

Half of the construction is buried, like a negative of the land, and assumed as being a part of it.

House in Leiria by ARX

Over that half-land, a second volume is placed, long and flattened, in apparent white concrete. In the inferior volume are located the technical areas, the less used areas or those of support.

House in Leiria by ARX

In the upper volume the socials areas gather around a main courtyard, and the bedrooms around a private second one.

House in Leiria by ARX

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After all, the main characteristic of this house is the way its dialectical feature comes about: the underground, “natural” half of the building, its upper half, floating and “artificial”, and the life flowing between the two.

House in Leiria by ARX

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One face, introverted, intimate, of shadow or reflected light; another, open, glowing, transparent, from where it is possible to enjoy the distant horizon.

House in Leiria by ARX

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In the end, all that matters, as always in this kind of project, is to understand the life and personality of those who come to us in need of a house design, and try to give them a new meaning for everyday life.

House in Leiria by ARX

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Owner: Private
Location: Pousos, Leiria, Portugal
Project-construction: 2006-11

House in Leiria by ARX

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Architecture: ARX Portugal: José Mateus e Nuno Mateus c/ Sofia Raposo, Bruno Gonçalves, Pedro Jesus
Engineerings: SAFRE, Projectos e Estudos de Engenharia, Lda.
Contractor: Manuel Mateus Frazão

House in Leiria by ARX

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Area: 1.010 m2


See also:

.

House in Possanco by ARX
with Stefano Riva
House for elderly people by
Aires Mateus Arquitectos
House in Paço de Arcos by
Jorge Mealha Arquitecto

Apartment by Pedro Varela & Renata Pinho

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

A yellow wall of storage divides this Portuguese apartment by architects Pedro Varela & Renata Pinho (photographs by José Campos).

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The renovation involved replacing the floor, adding storage and remodelling the kitchen, laundry room and bathroom.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The enormous yellow unit includes a pull-out stool with a smiling face for the client’s future child.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

See all our stories about projects in Portugal here.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The information below is from photographer Jose Campos:


The redesign of this apartment had to deal with specific issues: replace the existing floor, redesign the kitchen while keeping the laundry space, and create lots of storage room.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The bathrooms and master bedroom intervention is a welcome bonus to what was essential.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

Walls were remade out of carpentry work and house different solutions, from storage, to seating, partitioning and doors.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

Playful solutions such as assymetric round holes substituing knobs, and a smiley face substituting a handle, are carved in a yellow closet which is the project’s inner core.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The kitchen is like a big flipping machine, with a replaceable counter, convertible laundry room and hidden storage in a clean layout.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

A unified flooring and the furnishing/replacement of walls with closets gives the feeling of a bigger, somewhat openspace.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho

The bathrooms have two different geometric themes: one round, the other triangular; while the master bedroom uses wood to complement IKEA furniture.

Apartment by Pedro Varela and Renata Pinho


See also:

.

Rounded Loft by A1Architects Apartment  by pauzarq Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Here are some images by photographer Nelson Garrido of a restored architecture school building in Porto by Portuguese architect Álvaro Siza.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Siza originally completed the two-storey Carlos Ramos Pavilion in 1986.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Student studios fill both floors of the building and overlook a central courtyard.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

A tapered staircase at the corner of the school connects the two floors and leads to a small meeting space lined with curved wooden benches.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Siza was awarded the RIBA Royal Gold Medal in 2009 – click here to see a selection of photographs by Duccio Malagamba that document his work.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Here’s some text from Siza Vieira that further explains the building:


Pavilion Carlos Ramos – Faculty Of Architecture, Porto.

As a succinct summary of the courtyard type, the pavilion is located at the apex of a former estate, opposite the Dean’s office.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

With the external walls almost completely blank, the inner courtyard elevations are opened up.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Diagonal views from all rooms establish links with the surroundings and a view of the Douro River estuary.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

Service and access cores are contained in the corners.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

The tapered staircase leading from ground level to the first floor emerges onto a curved balcony with in-built seats.

The projections and chamfers of the building’s configuration follow a geometric “outline” which is marked on the perimeter of the linear lawn, and ends, as all lines must, in a scalloped granite block opposite the Dean’s office.

One of the elevations of the pavilion too, makes a somewhat unruly gesture.

The attention to details (ironwork, furniture, light fittings) is appropriate for a quiet space for study, while also perhaps giving the users a sense of formal discipline and inspiration.

Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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Carlos Ramos Pavilion by Álvaro Siza

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See also:

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura Museu de Foz Coa by Camilo Rebelo and Tiago Pimentel

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Narrow skylights create bands of light across the red bright ceiling of a sheltered school courtyard in Porto, Portugal.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

The covered terrace separates two new buildings designed by Portuguese architect Ricardo Bak Gordon at the Garcia D’Orta Secondary School.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

The first two-storey building houses a library and auditorium, while the second has a cafe-bar on the ground floor and study rooms above.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

The chunky canopy is suspended between the two buildings at first floor level and is the height of an entire storey.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Another school building by Bak Gordon also features the colour red, except it is on the floors rather than the ceilings – see the story here and see all our stories about Bak Gordon here.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Here are some more details from Bak Gordon:


Garcia D’Orta Secondary School

The modernization project of the School Garcia de Orta, based on the construction of a new building, whose location, program and relationship with the existing built and empty spaces, can set a new centrality in the plot, providing the school new program areas essential to the new times.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

This building, placed longitudinally in relation to school grounds, and an intermediate elevation view of the morphology of the terrain, allows the creation of a covered outdoor plaza that will serve as the epicenter of the whole school life, and supports two built spaces where we find the library, auditorium, bar / cafeteria, laboratories as well as other support equipment.

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Location: Boavista, Porto
Design phase: 04.2008
Constrution phase: 2010-2011

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Client: Parque Escolar EPE
Architect: Ricardo Bak Gordon

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Collaborators: Luís Pedro Pinto, Nuno Velhinho, Pedro Serrazina, Sonia Silva, Vera Higino, Walter Perdigão
Engineering consultants: Estruturas BETAR, Infraestruturas RGA / BETAR, Paisagismo FCAP
General contractor: Cantinhos / ACF

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

Site area: 26.250 m2
Built area: 3280 m2
Cost: 11 M.€

Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon

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Garcia D’Orta Secondary School by Bak Gordon


See also:

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Youth Centre by
Mi5 Arquitectos
University Library by
Studio Roelof Mulder
Les Cabanyes by
Arqtel Barcelona

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Lisbon studio Orgânica Arquitectura have completed a two-storey residence behind the solid stone walls of an otherwise ruined house in Sintra, Portugal.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

A wall of windows at the rear of Cabrela House overlooks a small courtyard, which is bounded by the retained stone structure.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

The new steel-framed house has a pitched roof that imitates the profile of both the existing building and the adjoining property next door.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

A living room, kitchen and work studio can be found on the ground floor, while two bedrooms are located on the storey above.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Similar projects from the Dezeen archive include a concrete house atop stone building remains in the Swiss Alps, a Corten steel artist’s studio inserted into a ruined Victorian dovecote, and two houses where a steeply-pitched roof covers an old dry stone construction in the Spanish Pyrenees.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Photography is by Fernando Guerra.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Here are a few words from the architects:


Cabrela House, Sintra, Portugal

On the site we found ruins of a house waiting to be recover.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

On the interior a house emerges: we preserved the limit walls and we designed an exterior space.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

At the same time we harmonize the smalls existing volumes that follow the house next door.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

On the main floor stay the kitchen, the living room and a small studio and at first floor two bedrooms.

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Architecture: Orgânica Arquitectura (Paulo Serôdio Lopes, Teresa Serôdio Lopes, Marta Belém)

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Client: José Silva Pereira

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Area: 142m2;

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura

Local: Cabrela, Sintra, Portugal

Cabrela House by Orgânica Arquitectura


See also:

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Casa Talia by
Marco Giunta
Jaffa Flat by
Pitsou Kedem
Moritzburg Museum Extension
by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Registry Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Five existing concrete kiosks in Madeira have been wrapped in volcanic basalt and overlapped by the walls of a new registry office.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

The kiosk blocks have been refurbished to provide enclosed meeting rooms and bathroom facilities for the open-plan office designed by Portuguese architects Duarte Caldeira.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

One block contains a staircase and lift that descend into an underground car park below.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Timber columns surround the entirely glazed building facade, landing on the roofs of kiosks that interrupt the walls.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Floors and surfaces inside the office and archive are finished in black granite, while timber panels cover the ceiling.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Other recently featured offices blocks include a translucent training centre in Italy and an office building for Singapore that resembles a giant periscopesee all out stories about office buildings here.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Photography is by Joao Morgado.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Here are some details from Duarte Caldeira:


Registrar Office of St Vicente, Madeira, Portugal – Duarte Caldeira

Situated on the northwest coast of the island of Madeira, Portugal, in an extensive river valley, it is near the centre of a small coastal rural village, nestled between the region’s natural landscape, which extends towards the area where the building is located.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Standing on top of an underground car park, the new translucent building allows an influx of natural light and the view of the impressive surrounding high and rugged green mountains.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

It is a wooden and glass structure arranged on top of various rectangular shaped concrete boxes, previously used as kiosks in the urban park.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Instead of demolishing the existing small buildings to make room for the new one, it was decided to use some of them as part of the new building, and also keep the original staircase and lift which gives access to the car park located below.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

The design program of this public services’ building is a simple one. It houses an open space office and workspace for the registrar office personnel, an archive area and a main private office, a meetings room and a reception counter for the general public.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

The volume of the new construction is larger and taller than the others and is intersected by some of the existing volumes which are now covered in grey volcanic basalt stone, the local most common stone.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

It was built as a structure of metal beams with flat cover, clad with natural heat treated wood. In the interior, the black granite flooring, window frames and counter, make a contrast with the wooden ceiling and the outdoor metal pillars which sustain the construction.

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Project Name – Registrar Office of St Vicente
Architect: Duarte Caldeira
Location: S.Vicente, Madeira, Portugal

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Project Team: Duarte Caldeira, Filipe Clairouin, Roberto Castro
Structural Engineers: Casca Lda
Lighting: Fernando Sousa Pereira

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Project Year: 2008
Start and Completion Dates – November 2009 / May 2011

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira

Contractor: Tecnovia S.A.
Project Area: building 420m2, site 3360 m²

Registrar Office of St Vicente by Duarte Caldeira


See also:

.

Office Building
by BOB361
Environmental Unit HQ
by Magén Arquitectos
Quarterhouse by
Alison Brook

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Two stark concrete houses in Lisbon feature secluded courtyards with overflowing ponds and swimming pools (photographs by Fernando Guerra).

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Designed by Portuguese architects Bak Gordon, the residences replace industrial sheds in the Santa Isabel district.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Residents enter the single-storey houses through bright yellow doors that interrupt the rough grey concrete facade.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Windows face inwards towards the private courtyards, turning away from overbearing apartment blocks that closely surround the houses.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

The larger of the two houses provides a home for the client’s family whilst the second is for rent.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

We’ve featured a few Portuguese architecture projects on Dezeen recently, including a dreamy holiday bunker, an asymmetrical white house and a medical research centre with striking circular cut-awaysclick here to see all our projects in Portugal.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Other projects by Bak Gordon include a refurbished concrete school and a house with colourful windowssee all the stories here.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Here are some more details from the architects:


“Perhaps what’s most important in this project is the desire to refer to the city that exists within the 
city – the places inside the city, whose matrix anchored in street, square and block it originated.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

There 
are many such places in Lisbon – more or less old, deeper or more open to the sky, but always very 
impenetrable.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

This other city, so often abandoned and unhealthy, can be recovered, giving way to another network of 
places, like overlapping meshes that can constitute a regeneration of the urban fabric.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

All this concerns the project for two houses built in the midst of a block in Santa Isabel, a site with 
an area of about 1.000 square meters previously occupied by semi-industrial sheds and with access via a 
small store open to the street.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

The programe mandated the construction of two houses, a bigger one meant for the family’s daily life and 
another two-bedroom one to be rented – all in the area of about 400 square meters for which construction 
was authorized, replacing the existing sheds.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

The site was notable in that the empty space stood out with respect to the built, and for the vertical 
surroundings embodied in the façades of the neighbouring buildings, which would suggest a very horizontal 
building, in contrast.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

So we built a house with very regular and hierarchic spaces – the voids – around which the programmatic 
living spaces gravitated.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

A first patio, more public, receives and distributes between the two houses.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Inside the house, we move among patios and gardens (some more contemplative, others bigger and for 
effective use) and trees which will grow here, projecting the scale over time.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

The house is almost obsessively built solely of exposed reinforced concrete.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Peripheral limits are 
covered in green climbers (changing natural element), while the other walls and roofs are left as such, 
simultaneously powerful and delicate, to resist the pressure of the environment.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Throughout these places an illusion is created in the confrontation of positive/negative, closed 
construction and void, which directs how the space is structured.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Between “being inside” and “being outside” 
are the modular steel windows, less wide where filtration is desired and larger to provide a generous expanse.

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon

Whoever goes there must enter by a yellow door.”

Santa Isabel Houses by Bak Gordon


See also:

.

Concrete House II
by A-Cero
House in Ropponmatsu
by Kazunori Fujimoto
Earth House by
BCHO Architects

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Portuguese architect and set designer João Mendes Ribeiro has converted the former house of a poet into a writer’s retreat (photos: Do Mal o Menos).

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Located in Coimbra, Casa da Escrita was formally named Casa do Arco and housed the late Portuguese poet João Cochofel (1919-1982).

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

The converted house now provides an archive, writing quarters and temporary accommodation for practicing writers.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

The decorative ceilings and corniced walls of the historic house are painted white, while the rooms are filled with polished wooden furniture.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

The legs of a newly inserted timber staircase enclose a shelved storage area below, whilst bookshelves are housed within rotating walls nearby.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

The open archive is located in the attic, where lines of desks provide workstations for researchers.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Similar renovation projects from the Dezeen archive include a house with floating wooden treads, another with unfinished timber furniture and an apartment with folding doors and sliding walls.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

More information is provided by the architects:


Recently awarded the Diogo Castilho 2011 Architectural Prize, the Casa da Escrita ñ former Casa do Arco and residence of the poet João Cochofel is located in the old upper part of Coimbra and is inserted in a dense urban set of predominantly residential narrow winding streets.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

The program asked for the contemporary reuse of the building, adaptating it to new functions, reconciling patrimonial and symbolic values with the present demands for comfort and flexibility embodied in the “emptying” and simplification of the living spaces.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Moreover, all the furnish of Casa da Escrita was carefully selected in order to provide the adequacy of the new spaces to a new functional program and to a wide audience, without setting aside the reference to the original space and the houseís atmosphere of comfort and intimacy.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

The house is now an open archive, writing workshop and temporary residence for writers supporting a broad set of different activities and interactions between literary writing and other artistic creations.

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Click above for larger image

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Click above for larger image

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Click above for larger image

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes RibeiroCasa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro

Casa da Escrita by João Mendes RibeiroCasa da Escrita by João Mendes Ribeiro


See also:

.

Groninger Museum renovation
by Baas and Hayón
Shophouse Transformation
by all(zone)
Alemanys 5 by
Anna Noguera