The house was built in such a way that great importance is given to the exterior areas, thus providing the house with great light in all its parts. The façade highlights the structure of the house, and the walls and large windows are distinguished thanks to the contrast between white and black, which in turn allows for a balance to lighten the large dimensions.
House 109 by Frari – architecture network. Photograph by Ivo Tavares Studio.
Description of project by Frari – architecture network
This house confronts one of the most important arteries in the city - the National Road EN109.
Since it is designed for residential use, the architectural piece is materialized in a uniform body which, through its shape and arrangement, protects itself from the busy road.
House 109 has the main facade perpendicular to the layout of the road, contrasting with the pre-existing reality. Thus, the front facade becomes blind, with a green space of transition and protection being created between it and the road – a barrier that protects the house from environmental and sound pollution created by the referred artery and, at the same time, grants the necessary privacy to the house.
The moment of entry, done discreetly through the north side, is celebrated by the great contemplation to the south thanks to the east-to-west windows that embrace the southern facade of the building, which is oriented perpendicularly to the confining artery. This way, the architectural piece, admittedly horizontal, ensures a side external space that follows the main façade. This space ensures a wide width able to meet the requirements that are imposed, working as a green area for leisure.
All compartments are turning to this important external space, ignoring all other possible spaces that are never as favourable in terms of the natural light that they provide.
House 109 by Frari – architecture network. Photograph by Ivo Tavares Studio.
The building, with its curved shape, ensures adequate protection from the wind on the porch while certifying a greater depth of the external space on the house axis.
All rooms look out over the external space through the porch, on the ground floor, or a joint balcony, on the top floor - elements that provide a uniform façade and allow for the volume to extend beyond its limits, always homogeneously.
This horizontal facade, just as the plan sets out, allows the upper body of the house to rise and stand out, through the retreat of the ground limits, composed by Corten coloured walls that, together with big windows, are distinguished from the unavoidable white body of the upper part of the building, in a game where structural balance and materiality mix together to lighten up a volume with great dimensions.
The simple and solid piece intends to position itself as a critical response to interventions in lands neighbouring national roads, solving the problem of not being able to benefit from the external spaces and dictating the missing rule that enables these roads to have respectable habitability.