Casa Lineal / Metrópolis Oficina de Arquitectura


© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí


© Juan Solano Ojasí


© Juan Solano Ojasí


© Juan Solano Ojasí


© Juan Solano Ojasí

  • Architect: José Orrego
  • Location: Lima District, Peru
  • Area: 839.18 m2
  • Photography: Juan Solano Ojasí
  • Assistant Architect: Anahi Bastian y Elmer Ramirez
  • Structure: Ing. Jorge Avendaño
  • Sanitation Installations: AT Consultores (Ing. Ana Torres)
  • Electrical Installation: AT Consultores (Ing. Ana Torres)
  • Construction: Américo Chávez
  • Lights: Trazzo Iluminación
  • Authorization: Global Access S.A.C
  • Site: 2542.47 m2
  • Building Area: 839.18 m2

© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí

The main idea for this house was to create a concavity to get a controlled view inside the lot.


Model

Model

The house is a small tribute to the pursuit of Mies Van der Rohe, where the transparency and the inner courtyards  were held.


© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí

The building has one floor at ground level to lighten the presence of itself on the lot and then developed a basement with a corridor for bedrooms and the intimate areas.


© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí

The lot has a perforated platform that sustains the roofs with the same structural profiles.


Section

Section

The house is configured based on three horizontal plans, the columns help to make this possible. These plans define a front terrace, an inner terrace with a pool and an intimate backyard.


© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí

The interior is defined by the shadows of the upper plans, because their enclosures are glazed in all its magnitude. In it, the space is continuous, and a stone veneer volume followed by wooden floors define a primary and simple finish. 


© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí

At the front , a pavilion of service that is linked to the house through the kitchen develops


© Juan Solano Ojasí

© Juan Solano Ojasí

The continuity between the exterior and the interior space is a both directions experience inside the house.


Section

Section

The house theme recurs in other projects of Metropolis, where the space flows and the nature surrounds the architecture completely, making it part of the house through transparencies, participating with it to the very end of the new created situation.

http://ift.tt/260oeP3

The House Illuminated by Fonseca by Fonseca

Parque Natural Ribeiro Frio – Madeira

via 500px http://ift.tt/23emIDQ

12 Ways to Start A Business – Find the real opportunities

Looking for ways to start a business? Want to avoid scams? Here are 12 time-tested ways to find good business ideas on your own.

http://ift.tt/1YupYuv

How to Write Product Descriptions That Sell

Learn to write product descriptions that show customers your product’s benefits and persuade them to buy.

http://ift.tt/1UlylFC

“EU design displays the best and the worst of doing things by scrupulous consensus”



Opinion: on the Brexit battleground, fluffy design nostalgia is being wielded as a weapon against the EU’s bland passports, forgettable glass buildings and uninspiring flag. This could all have been avoided, says Will Wiles. (more…)

http://ift.tt/1UAZyRX

Need a taxi? by jimbos by jimbos

Thank you for your support and kindness.
Have a nice evening!

via 500px http://ift.tt/23enIYA

Sue by regnumsaturni by regnumsaturni

A lonely Girl by SamRoniger by SamRoniger

A lonely Girl at the fountain of the usually packed, but beautiful Imam’s Square in central Esfahan

via 500px http://ift.tt/1UlvE6V

Mrigadayavan Palace by MuakEverton by MuakEverton

Mrigadayavan Palace is a former royal residence and tourist attraction in Cha Am, Phetchaburi Province, Thailand.

The palace was commissioned by King Vajiravudh to serve as a holiday villa. The king drafted the designs for the villa, which consists of sixteen teak buildings raised by concrete pillars and linked together by a series of walkways. Construction took place during 1923–24, and was overseen by Italian architect Ercole Manfredi.

via 500px http://ift.tt/1XrPO2o