Spanish firm BETA.Ø architecture office designed this single-family house in El Viso neighborhood, a protected area in the city of Madrid. With an existing structure as a starting point, the house seeks to optimize space and energy efficiency, as well as integrating into its surroundings.
BETA.Ø bases the intervention on four pillars: Integration into the environment,
enhancement of the exterior green space, optimization of the resulting space and the use of passive and active design strategies that optimize the energy performance of the building.

Using materials associated with industrial use, such as wood cement particleboards, concrete slabs, steel and glass, combined with pieces of furniture finished in unvarnished natural wood combine the warmth of the domestic space with the desired spatial clarity.
 

Description of project by BETA.Ø architecture office

The construction of a semi-detached single-family home in the consolidated, protected urban environment of the El Viso area is resolved based on four concepts:
 
- Integrating the new single-family townhouse into its setting, while respecting the volume features of the two bays in the existing building and striving to blend the new building with its extension in with the neighbouring buildings through a thorough study of its volume and the scale of its openings.
 
- Accentuating the natural green space outside over the built interior area. Minimising the ground floor extension and incorporating the outdoor spaces into the home on each floor by means of large windows and the successive terraces the building produces through the staggering of its storeys.
 
- Optimisation of the resulting space, without generating drab circulation areas, enabling the design of open spaces.
 
- The incorporation of passive and active design strategies to optimise the new building’s energy performance. This includes incorporating water on the roof to exploit its thermal inertia and the installation of geothermal wells in the home.
 
Spatially, a lightweight suspended structure colonises the central space in the home like a tree, characterising the large three-storey space that resolves the house’s vertical communication, acting as a true backbone to the setting, binding spatial, functional and environmental aspects, optimising the interior space in the home.
 
The freshness of the irrigation and moisture from the garden are exploited by introducing them into the diaphanous interior space of the home through the large windows, using the Venturi effect generated by the three-storey central space ventilated at the top by two skylights, thatallows the wind to flow through the designed water hanging lamps to dissipate the heat and cool the house naturally in the hot months. The space and the selected materials filter the natural energy present in the site, stores it and redistributes it to provide a thermal indoor ambient and a biological outdoor environment.
 
Inclusion of geothermal energy and the implementation of numerous passive strategies in the very structure of the home to make use of natural ventilation and the thermal inertia of the materials themselves contribute to moderating the temperatures in the interior space and optimising the house’s energy performance throughout the year.
 
The rest of the spaces that make up the house’s domestic layout are grouped around this central space. Open spaces that the user can adapt and personalise by merely arranging the furniture, avoiding the generation of drab circulation areas.
 
The design prioritises natural lighting and cross-ventilation of the rooms, applying finishes associated with industrial use that unify the interior and exterior environments, such as the continuous compacted cement and wood chip board flooring, exposed concrete slabs, steel and glass. These spaces are covered with some freedom in materials with smooth finishes, with expansive wood-trimmed windows, framing views and creating a variety of domestic nooks that incorporate pieces of furniture with unvarnished natural wood finishes contributing the necessary warmth to the domestic layout as a counterpoint to the bare, clean spatial nature of the design.
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Architects
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BETA.Ø architecture office
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Design team
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Borja Peña, Ernesto Sierra, Xabier Ortega, Virginia Lainez, Miguel Figueira, David Parra,Pablo Rodríguez, Cristina Sánchez y Clara Castañeda.
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Area
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500 m²
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Date
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2018
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Location
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Colonia El Viso. Madrid, Spain.
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Photographers
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Imagen Subliminal / David Zarzoso
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BETA.Ø is an award-winning architecture firm based in Madrid which develops its professional activity in architecture, urban planning, landscape and design.

We consider our work to be an opportunity to improve the natural and urban environment and the quality of life of the people who trust in us to develop their projects.

Our daily work constitutes a stimulating challenge to identify the optimal solution, which must also be creative and make it possible to give added value to each project (the beta.Ø). That which captures its essence, embracing the changing nature and necessary evolution of each project within the complex development of the construction process, will provide value over time.

Borja Peña / Founder & Partner Architect.- Borja studied at the Superior Technical School of Architecture of Madrid (ETSAM) and the Technische Universität in Darmstadt, between 1992 and 2000. He subsequently concluded his doctoral studies in the Architectural Projects Department at the ETSAM.

He worked as an assistant professor of Architectural Projects at the ETSAM from 2001 to 2004 and has also been a guest professor at the Universidad Camilo José Cela and the Universidad San Pablo CEU in Madrid.

The extensive training and experience that Borja has accumulated over years of collaboration with prestigious architectural firms, such as that of Rafael Moneo, has enabled him to establish a highly professional practice, having received numerous national and international awards for his professional endeavours, notably including the recent 2012-2014 VETECO ASEFAVE Award for Best Renovation for the work on the covered equestrian arena in Madrid. Furthermore, in 2012, BETA.Ø was named one of the most interesting emerging practices in Madrid by the ARQUIA/PRÓXIMA cultural programme, sponsored by the Fundación Caja de Arquitectos.

His projects have been featured in several specialised publications, books and architecture blogs.

Ernesto Sierra Díaz / Partner Architect.- Ernesto studied at the Superior Technical School of Architecture of Madrid (ETSAM), where he graduated with a double major in Building and Urban Planning. He received the Ángel Herrera Award for Best Academic Record for the years 1995-1998.

From 2002 to 2007, he collaborated with several renowned architecture firms, including Sancho-Madridejos and Frechilla & López-Peláez. In 2005, he founded Moho Arquitectos, based in Murcia, where he was a partner until 2010. During this period, he developed several projects of varying scales, won national and international awards, participated in conferences and exhibitions, and his work appeared in several architecture magazines and blogs. He joined BETA.Ø in 2011, becoming a partner in 2015. 

Xabier Ortega / Partner Architect.- Xabier studied at the Superior Technical School of Architecture of University of Navarra (ETSAUN) from 2006 to 2012, where he obtained Merit Award on his Thesis Project.

After working with various architecture firms and participating in numerous design collaborations in the areas of fashion and visual arts, he joined BETA.Ø in 2013, becoming a partner in 2015.

Collaborators since 2008; Puy Alonso Martínez-Campos, Carla Arranz Sobrini, Almudena Cano Piñeiro, Luis Escudero Escauriaza, Miguel Figueira, María García, Alia García Germán, Cristina Gómez Abecia, María González de la Obra, Julio Gótor Valcárcel, Virginia Laínez, Inés Lozano Martín, Isabel Moneo Lara, Manuel Montalvo, Ignacio Muinelo, Javier Muñoz Posse, David Parra,  Lucía Pérez, Amaya Pérez, Pablo Rodríguez, Beatriz Ruiz de Hoyos, Cristina Sánchez, Marta Sbaraglia, Silvia Sordi , Nagore Urrutia del Campo, Regina Valle y  Pilar Vidal.
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Published on: April 15, 2019
Cite: "A cool warmth. X.Ø house by BETA.Ø architecture office" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/a-cool-warmth-xo-house-betao-architecture-office> ISSN 1139-6415
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