Casa R&C is the new project by architect Cristián Nanzer. The house is located in the La Cascada neighborhood in the southwest of the city of Córdoba, Argentina. The neighborhood is characterized by the La Cañada stream that becomes an iconic promenade for the city, passing through the center and different neighborhoods until it flows into the Seguía River.

The typological decisions of the project were determined based on the dimensions, inclination and orientation of the land, locating the social area on the first floor to take advantage of the views and the bedroom area on the ground floor in relation to the garden.

Cristián Nanzer makes the roof one of the most prominent elements of the project. The ground floor currently serves as an independent base to raise the first floor that will support the vaulted roof organized in five parallel bands that organize the interior space and define the intermediate areas. One of the bands acts as the access axis, connecting the spaces and allowing the relationship with the exterior park.

The materiality of the house is characterized by its double condition. On the ground floor, which acts as a base, concrete walls are used that give the project a feeling of heaviness. The upper floor, however, is characterized by its lightness and transparency thanks to the glass windows, making the roof the protagonist.

R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.

R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.

Project description by Cristián Nanzer

The house is located in a gated suburban neighborhood in the southwestern area of the city of Córdoba, near the source of the La Cañada stream. Once systematized, this stream becomes one of the city’s iconic promenades, flowing through various neighborhoods, reaching the city center, and ultimately emptying into the Suquía River.

The plot measures 25.45 meters by 59.00 meters, with a south-facing front and a gentle slope towards the rear boundary, which has a direct northern orientation and borders the neighborhood's golf course. This configuration influenced the project's typological decisions, placing the social area on the first floor to take advantage of distant views, while the bedrooms, daily living spaces, and service areas are arranged on the ground floor, oriented to the north in close connection with the garden.

The ground floor functions as a wall-like base for an independent structure that rises on the first floor, supporting a vaulted roof arranged in five parallel bands that organize all the spaces within the house. The spacing between the axes of the vaults is determined by maximizing the use of the plot's surface area while respecting the lateral setbacks stipulated by local regulations (with a band width of 3.45 meters and a total length of 15.50 meters). This system creates a "parasol"-type roof with continuous spatiality, defining intermediate areas at both the south and north facades.

R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.
R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.

The project is organized around five bands that define both the structural order and the programmatic distribution of the house, spanning both levels and establishing a construction module applicable to all systems involved. One of these bands establishes the longitudinal axis of access, connecting the approach spaces, the entrance, and the subsequent relationship with the exterior park.

Access is provided through a double-height space with distant views of the golf course, where the staircase is located, connecting the upper and lower floors and providing access to the park and pool area. This layout extends the interior typological organization to the geometry of the exterior spaces.

The project is based on two main operations: a wall-like podium that resolves connections, access points, and adapts to the terrain's slopes, and a vaulted roof that rises above the base, functioning as a shading element. This roof, supported by an independent structure, creates transitional intermediate spaces, characterized by its wide overhangs on the north and south facades.

R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.
R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.

The materiality of the house reflects its dual condition. On the ground floor, the exterior walls are made of cyclopean concrete, providing character and weight to the base. In contrast, the upper floor emphasizes transparency and distant views, highlighted by the vaulted roof suspended on an independent structure. Concrete walls are only present on the adjoininghouses.

The design of the house, in its raw materiality, reveals its construction process and the craftsmanship involved. The predominant materials are stone and concrete, with exposed brick reserved exclusively for the vaults. This choice emphasizes, through both geometry and material, the diffusion of soft, warm light throughout the main space.

The physical expression of the house extends even to the electrical installations, which, following the concept of an industrial building, are arranged visibly through galvanized piping. This provides greater versatility to the spaces and allows for future adaptations according to changing needs over time.

Casa R&C por Cristián Nanzer. Fotografía por Gonzalo Viramonte.
R&C House by Cristián Nanzer. Photograph by Gonzalo Viramonte.

In order to keep the vaulted ceiling free of any installations, it was decided that the water tank would be an independent sculptural element that, without touching the main structure, would scale and identify the entrance to the house.

As a provisional conclusion, it can be defined as a house on the periphery of an overly sprawling city, with the constant hybridity and contrasts typical of our Latin American cities. It is conceived with archaic and universal architectural techniques, such as heavy walls and vaulted ceilings, and materialized with the skilled craftsmanship inherited from excellent regional builders, from the vast South American region. It is designed within the frameworks of a modern tradition learned over time. Despite (or rather, precisely because of) all of this, the house aims to respond—without rhetoric—to a contemporary architecture that is unique to its place and its time.

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Architects
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Collaborators
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Technical Direction.- Cristián Nanzer, Daniel Villani.
Collaborators.- Lourdes Cuadro, Juan Dimuro.
Structural calculation.- Edgar Morán.
Construction.- Estudio Nebreda & Villani. Adriana Nebreda, Daniel Villani.
Landscape Design.- Estudio Paisaje Contemporáneo.
Electrical Installations.- Gabriel Canelo.
Carpentry.- Empresa Anodal.

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Dates
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2020 - 2023.

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Location
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La Cascada neighborhood, Cordoba City, Argentina.

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Photography
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Gonzalo Viramonte, Juan Dimuro.

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Cristián Nanzer, an architect since 1993, founded his architectural studio Estudio NZ in 2013, as a synthesis of his professional practice and his academic activity. His architecture focuses on materialisation and theoretical exploration, moving thought through his projects.

The tension between tradition and innovation defines the search territories of his practice. The legacy as a cultural and operational reference and innovation as a necessary mutation of what is inherited to face emerging contexts are the basis of his projects.

He currently works simultaneously and in a complementary manner in two fields of the discipline, professionally practicing architecture and academically as a Professor of Architecture at the Faculty of Architecture, Urbanism and Design FAUD of the National University of Córdoba, Argentina.

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Published on: January 21, 2025
Cite: "Vaulted roof. R&C House by Cristián Nanzer" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/vaulted-roof-rc-house-cristian-nanzer> ISSN 1139-6415
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