Spanish architecture studio FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos completes the first home in a series of projects commissioned by sustainable design company, Malaspina Design. The house is located in Bend, a small town in the state of Oregon, located east of the Cascades, a strip of territory between the coniferous forests and the mountains of the Pacific Northwest and the first foothills of the Great Basin, a basin of arid interior that runs from southern Idaho to the Mojave Desert in the western United States.

The conditions of the land are of great importance in the project since the house is in an arid climate that conditions the environment. The house is located between coniferous forests, mountains and an important national park, so close contact with nature was taken into account at the time of construction.
FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos defines the "M1 House" as a floating roof on a series of stepped platforms that follow the natural topography of the land, for whose construction they have used cross-laminated wood with deep-edged beams, as the main material to build the structure. The façade is covered by aluminium panels in champagne tones creating cohesion with the wood and the large windows that accompany the house.

The house consists of a single floor and the program is organized in a continuous sequence of uses around a large ponderosa pine that is located in the centre of the plot. The presence of the tree plays an important role since it articulates the different rooms and inhabited spaces around it. Outside we can find a perfect relationship between natural vegetation and the domestic garden.


M1 House by FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos. Photograph by LGM studio.

M1 House by FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos. Photograph by LGM studio.
 

Project description by FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos

M1 House is the first of a series of projects developed for Malaspina Design, a leading company in the design of sustainable housing in the State of Oregon, on the West Coast of the USA, which contacted us to explore the limits between the dream house of the Pacific Northwest and contemporary architecture.

Geography
The project has a deep link with the environmental conditions of the site. The first homes are located in the city of Bend, east of the Cascades, a strip of territory between the coniferous forests and mountains of the Pacific Northwest and the first foothills of the Great Basin, an arid inland basin that runs from southern Idaho to the Mojave Desert. This dual condition, between the views to the mountains and a semi-arid ground, triggers the design strategy, which has to resolve the relationship with a majestic and protected landscape, on the one hand, and the construction of more controlled, domestic exteriors, on the other.

A house around a tree
M1 House is basically a floating roof on a series of stepped platforms that follow the natural topography of the land. This simple scheme provides highly varied spatial situations based on slight variations in the level of transparency of the façades, the relationship of the ground floor with the exterior slope, or the position in the sequence of spaces in the house.


M1 House by FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos. Photograph by LGM studio.

The house is organized on a single floor. The presence of a magnificent ponderosa pine tree right in the middle of the lot orders the different rooms around it, building a continuous ring in which all the areas are arranged in a continuous sequence. The landscape design also takes part in this interior-exterior diagram that enhances both worlds: the exterior natural space and the domestic and designed courtyard garden.

Systems
The house is built using a cross-laminated timber structure providing deep-edged beams that are supported by timber-framed walls placed radially around the perimeter, without touching it. This ensures the “floatability” of the roof, which is separated from the facades and cladded in a champagne-toned aluminium composite panel. The façades are built with traditional wooden framework systems -balloon frame- finished in a modified for cladding. The floors are made up of a terraced concrete slab-on-grade foundation, under which the main facilities run.                                 

More information

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Architects
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FRPO Rodriguez & Oriol Arquitectos. Lead Architects.- Pablo Oriol, Fernando Rodríguez.
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Project team
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Ricardo González.
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Collaborators
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Ricardo González, Bighorn Construction and Mike Szabo Landscape.
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Client
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Area
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850 m².
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Dates
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Project start.- 02-2019.
Building start.- 03-2020.
Building end.- 01-2022.
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Location
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Tetherow, Bend, Oregon, USA.
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Photography
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Kayla McKenzie, LGM studio.
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Renderings
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Supernova Visual.
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FRPO (2008) is an architecture office based in Madrid directed by Fernando Rodriguez and Pablo Oriol, internationally recognized with the Architectural Record Design Vanguard (New York, 2012), Europe 40 under 40 (2009) and Bauwelt Preis (Berlin, 2007) awards, among others. Their work has also received prestigious awards, such as the selection for the Architectural Review Emerging Architecture Awards (2019), the FAD Awards (2019), the Spanish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale (2016, Golden Lion), the nomination for the Mies van der Rohe Awards (2015), the IX and XII Spanish Biennials of Architecture and Urbanism (2007 and 2013), or the V and IX Ibero-American Biennials of Architecture and Urbanism (2006 and 2014).

FRPO’s work has been widely published, and its proposals have been disseminated through articles, lectures, and frequent exhibitions, both nationally and internationally.

Trained as architects at the ETSAM in Madrid, at the IIT in Chicago and the TU Berlin, Pablo Oriol and Fernando Rodriguez are professors in the Department of Architectural Design at the ETSAM UPM, as well as regular guests at various national and foreign universities.

Fernando Rodríguez holds a PhD in Architecture since 2015. He studied architecture at UPM ETSAM in Madrid and at the Technische Universität Berlin, between 1995 and 2003. He has collaborated in MVRDV and has been Invited Critic with Kees Christiaanse at the TU Berlin. He worked as a project architect for Abalos & Herreros in 2004. He is a lecturer at the Architectural Design Department of UPM ETSAM and at the IE University.

Pablo Oriol studied architecture at UPM ETSAM and the IIT College of Architecture in Chicago, between 1995 and 2005. He was Cultural Activities Curator for the General Department of Architecture of the Ministry of Public Works for the ETSAM and the Cervantes Institute between 1999 and 2002. He was part of the redaction team of the magazine Arquitectura Viva in 2006. He is PhD candidate and lecturer at the Architectural Design Department of UPM ETSAM and at the IE University.

In 2005 Fernando Rodriguez and Pablo Oriol were founding partners of Nolaster Oficina de Arquitectura, where they developed their professional activity until 2007. In 2008 they established FRPO as a natural evolution of their previous professional experiences.
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Published on: April 5, 2023
Cite: "Perfect harmony between nature and a home. M1 House by FRPO" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/perfect-harmony-between-nature-and-a-home-m1-house-frpo> ISSN 1139-6415
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