.
Arquitectura
Ref: 9756_01
Ref: 9756_02
Ref: 9756_03
Ref: 9756_04
Ref: 9756_05
Ref: 9756_06
Ref: 9756_07
Ref: 9756_08
Ref: 9756_09
Ref: 9756_10
Ref: 9756_11
Ref: 9756_12
Ref: 9756_13
Ref: 9756_14
Ref: 9756_15
Ref: 9756_16
Ref: 9756_17
Ref: 9756_18
Ref: 9756_19
Ref: 9756_20
Ref: 9756_21
Ref: 9756_22
Ref: 9756_23
Ref: 9756_24
Ref: 9756_25
Ref: 9756_26
Ref: 9756_27
Ref: 9756_28
Ref: 9756_29
Ref: 9756_30
Ref: 9756_31
Ref: 9756_32
Ref: 9756_33
Ref: 9756_34
Ref: 9756_35 Arquitectos
Colaboradores
Landscape Architect: Messana O'Rorke
General Contractor: Rafael Morales Molina Construcción
Fabricator: TORINCO SLU
Structural Engineer: LABBIM Arquitectos
MEP Engineer: TotalClima
Sustainability Consultant: Antonio Torrero Venzalá
Interior Design: Messana O'Rorke
Facade Consultant: TORINCO SLU
Acoustics Consultant / Engineer: TORINCO SLU
Documentos
1808.0 Cordoba House First Floor 03.pdf 1808.0 Cordoba House Ground Floor.pdf House in Pedro Abad_Description.pdfEnlaces relacionados
Messana O`Rorke ArchitectsThe Pedro Abad House in the province of Cordoba, Spain, draws inspiration from the familiar forms and materials of neighboring buildings which it distills into a minimalist interpretation of the vernacular row house. The design demonstrates how sustainable, modern architecture can accord with a centuries-old architectural fabric.
The 2,676.square-feet home was designed for a couple and their young daughter using Passive House standards. The in-fill site was deep enough to accommodate a three-bedroom residence with a sizable rear terrace. The prosaic wooden front door opens into a vestibule that leads into an interior courtyard enclosed by an expansive skylight. Serving as the nexus of the home's circulation, the vertical volume floods the house with natural light and acts as a passive climate regulator by promoting cross-ventilation and allowing warm air to rise and dissipate.
Public areas, including an open plan living and dining zone, are intuitively arranged on the ground floor to foster family gathering and social interaction, with the bedrooms on the second level for privacy. The great room opens seamlessly onto a south-facing pool terrace, designed to capture optimal sun throughout the day and to extend living spaces outdoors, anchoring the home in its Mediterranean climate.
The design's cool palette of white walls and concrete floors is accented by chestnut wood detailing, including frames around the deep, single-pane windows and sliding glass doors. Vertical planks of chestnut clad the kitchen island and the tall doors that hide the pantry, storage area and refrigerator. Upstairs, the primary bedroom has an ensuite bath and a Jack-and-Jill bathroom separates the additional two bedrooms with French doors that open to a deep balcony and staircase overlooking the pool terrace and city views.
With its composition of white planes scaled at different heights and angles, the terrace intensifies the sense of the vastness of the sky while providing glimpses of abutting buildings for context. The sun's rays cast a play of shadow across the smooth concrete surfaces throughout the afternoon, as the infinity pool's waterfall edge produces a tranquil ambient sound.
Constructed of thick, thermally-insulated concrete, the house uses embedded radiant cooling and heating and thermal-insulated glass windows to reduce noise and moderate indoor temperatures. On upstairs' windows, green shades provide calculated solar shading. A rooftop solar array yields so much power the owners sell electricity back to the town grid.
The Pedro Abad House is a synthesis of contemporary design and local tradition, demonstrating how sustainable architecture can root itself gracefully within a historic Spanish town. The home is also a lesson in how a quietly simple design offers an illuminating way to live.