Architects Estudio BaBO
clad these three wooden houses in Patagonia, Argentina, with black-painted
cypress so that they would look "as monolithic as possible". All three
houses have pine frames and wooden walls, and only the roofing is metal. The
assignment was to design and build three units of row houses, each one of two
floors. The program consists of a living room, dining room, kitchen, toilet,
and laundry room on the ground floor and two bedrooms and a complete bathroom
on the upper floor. A patio is incorporated in each of the units to enrich the
visual connections and to open up the ground floor. It also allows a solution
for the heights in the project to satisfy both the program and the regulations.
The decision is also taken to step the units linearly freeing one of the sides
of the patio. These operations guarantee a greater and more homogeneous natural
lighting of the units and allow the visual impact of the project and its
immediate environment to be minimized. Indirectly a greater privacy in the
garden expansions is achieved, and the visuals from the living rooms are
controlled. Volumetrically the project is articulated to be understood as one
unit. The inclined planes of the roofs link the units together and the walls
are understood as a result.
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