Casa Mororó is a private residence located in Campos do Jordão, Brazil.
The 7,858-square-foot home was designed by Studiomk27 in 2015.
Casa Mororó by Studiomk27:
“The Mororó House is in a mountainous region, 180 km (112 mi)
from the city of São Paulo, known for its low temperatures. The
architecture sought to create generous internal spaces for the cold
days, such as, for example, a cozy living room and an enclosed bathhouse
with a pool, where the views can be appreciated while being protected
by a skin of glass.
Externally, the same continuous volume creates a duality between
an opaque block – where the living room, bedrooms and service areas are –
and the transparent stretch of the heated pool and sauna. The volumetry
of the house was given by a sixty-five meters extrusion of an
icon-house, with pitched roof. Furthermore, an external wooden deck
connects the spaces and creates a solarium to be used during the summer
months.
In the opaque part of the volume, which is 50m (164ft) long, the
openings were minimized and used as sliding doors to intensify the
integration between inside and out. This relation between empty and full
in the façade allows for an excellent thermal performance, with a high
degree of electric energy conservation. The transparent stretch is
fourteen meters long and the internal ventilation was spatially designed
to avoid condensation on the glass by the heated pool, which would harm
the relation with the view.
The house was not situated on the top of a rugged site, as
initially desired by the clients, but in its lowest part – in the midst
of a beautiful forest of pine trees. This solution allowed the building
to be surrounded by nature, creating an intimate relation with the site.
The initial premise of the project was to have a quick and cheap
construction. Therefore, the architecture found industrialized solutions
such as metal structures and steelframe walls. The site, despite high
rainfall, remained always clean. Unlike the Brazilian constructive
culture, few elements were made entirely on site, but instead mounted or
assembled there. The time to build this house was less than the usual,
even with the site’s difficult access.
The use of the internal materials, such as wood, made the house a
cozy one, like the traditional chalets in the mountains. Following the
desires of the future residents, the kitchen could be integrated to the
spaces via wooden sliding doors – that could be entirely opened. Thus,
it was not only possible to design ample and continuous spaces on the
inside, but also to have central spaces for the quotidian life which
organized the house plan.”
image source: homedsgn.com
http://www.homedsgn.com/2015/04/28/casa-mororo-by-studiomk27/
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