EH House / Estudio GMARQ
This is a permanent home for a young couple that doesn’t plan on having children, at least in the medium term. So the program escapes the usual projects of closed neighborhoods.
© Alejandro Peral
Architects: Estudio GMARQ
Location: Pilar, Argentina
Architects In Charge: Arch. Adrian Govetto, Arch. Lucas Mansilla, Arch. Marcelo Forja
Area: 200.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Alejandro Peral
Other Participants: Arch. Leonel Graziano
Structure: Eng. Eduardo Diner
© Alejandro Peral
Text description provided by the architects. This is a permanent home for a young couple that doesn’t plan on having children, at least in the medium term. So the program escapes the usual projects of closed neighborhoods.
© Alejandro Peral
On the other hand, the land has the front facing north, so public rooms that turn to the garden do not receive direct sunlight. To respond to these constraints, the main rooms become passing through rooms north-south direction, working visual barriers to achieving privacy where necessary.
Lower Floor Plan
Upper Floor Plan
In the case of the dining room, a garden with plants designed, whose volume fulfills that same function. Upstairs, the suite opens to a patio that guarantees the entrance of the sun but cuts the visuals from the street.
© Alejandro Peral
...
© Alejandro Peral
Architects: Estudio GMARQ
Location: Pilar, Argentina
Architects In Charge: Arch. Adrian Govetto, Arch. Lucas Mansilla, Arch. Marcelo Forja
Area: 200.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Alejandro Peral
Other Participants: Arch. Leonel Graziano
Structure: Eng. Eduardo Diner
© Alejandro Peral
Text description provided by the architects. This is a permanent home for a young couple that doesn’t plan on having children, at least in the medium term. So the program escapes the usual projects of closed neighborhoods.
© Alejandro Peral
On the other hand, the land has the front facing north, so public rooms that turn to the garden do not receive direct sunlight. To respond to these constraints, the main rooms become passing through rooms north-south direction, working visual barriers to achieving privacy where necessary.
Lower Floor Plan
Upper Floor Plan
In the case of the dining room, a garden with plants designed, whose volume fulfills that same function. Upstairs, the suite opens to a patio that guarantees the entrance of the sun but cuts the visuals from the street.
© Alejandro Peral
...
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