Monday, 26 July 2021

Carvalho Araújo completes monolithic concrete house in a Portuguese forest

Casa na Caniçada has a blind wall

Concrete and glass are used throughout the interior and exterior of this holiday home in northern Portugal, which local studio Carvalho Araújo designed to blend in with its woodland setting.

Located in Vieira do Minho in the district of Braga, Casa na Caniçada is a second home built on a densely wooded 0.75-acre site next to the Caniçada reservoir.

Casa na Caniçada is a concrete home
Top: the front and rear of the home are surrounded by paved areas. Above: the home was built on sloping terrain

An existing building of poor design and construction quality was removed to make way for the three-storey house designed by local office Carvalho Araújo.

The original building's volume informed the scale and proportions of the new house, which was designed to accommodate the typical spaces required for single-family living.

Casa na Caniçada has an open plan interior
Glazed walls line the ground level

The programme is arranged with the bedrooms on the upper floor and social areas including the kitchen, dining area and living room spread across the lower levels.

Due to the sloping site, the bottom level is partly embedded in the hillside. This space containing the kitchen and dining area features large openings on two sides that connect it visually with the forest.

A series of steps lead to Casa na Caniçada
The house has a gabled roof

The house is entered on the middle floor, which is lined on opposite sides by full-height windows. The opening containing the entrance looks onto the hillside, while the other side frames a view towards the reservoir.

"The landscape and the place are the essence of this project," architect Joana Nunes told Dezeen. "Simple solutions were sought in terms of spaces and materials to achieve what is difficult to define or explain... It's something you live and feel."

Casa na Caniçada has a board formed exterior
The home is surrounded by woodlands

The entirely open-plan living space contains a large hearth at one end, with staircases at the opposite end connecting this floor with the upper and lower levels.

The building features a simple gabled form and is constructed entirely from raw, exposed concrete. The resulting bunker-like structure extends the sense of protection offered by the natural surroundings.

"The choice of concrete reinforces the notion of freedom that was sought in the definition of the programme, allowing the creation of wider spaces," Nunes said.

"Simultaneously, it is a material that opposes this notion of freedom due to its rigour and austerity in construction. It is a material that does not need maintenance, that ages with dignity and easily camouflages itself in the landscape."

Windows look out to the tree line
The ground floor contains living spaces

Externally, the poured layers of concrete add subtle texture to the monolithic elevations, while landscaping that includes staggered concrete stairs complements the main structure.

Inside the house, the concrete walls, floors and ceilings are polished to create smooth surfaces that reflect both natural and artificial light and help to brighten the spaces.

A corridor at Casa na Caniçada leads between levels
Concrete covers the walls, floors and ceiling of the interior

On the upper floor beneath the slanted roof, four beds are arranged towards the centre of the space, with toilets and small shower rooms located at either end.

Glass walls lined with curtains provide some privacy for the bedrooms whilst retaining the sense of a large, communal sleeping area.

Glass was used as walls
Glass divides different sleeping spaces on the top level

José Manuel Carvalho Araújo founded his eponymous studio in Braga in 1996, followed by a second office in Sao Paulo, Brazil, in 2013. The multidisciplinary firm works across architecture, interior design, product design and branding projects.

The agency has previously completed a concrete house with a rooftop pool that looks onto the Serra d'Arga mountains, and a rural residence house comprising a concrete structure and timber roof form separated by a horizontal band of glazing.

Photography is by Nudo.

The post Carvalho Araújo completes monolithic concrete house in a Portuguese forest appeared first on Dezeen.



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