Villa AM was born from the hand of Mesura, a single-family house that arises as a result of a combination of climate and culture. This project is located in the city of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, whose historic centre is considered a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

After five years of work, Mesura's intention focuses on capturing the idea of a present that is constantly changing. But which, nevertheless, has never ceased to forget its historical and cultural character. The warm desert, its harbour location and its vernacular architecture are transformed to give life to this unique and modernised dwelling.
Mesura always keeps in mind the duality of the Arab house as a sanctuary and, at the same time, as a social space with a certain public character. The route of the house consists of a significant division of uses and delimited visual privacy that provokes complex flows.

Its L-shape reflects an attempt to adapt to the traditional U-shaped dwelling, but with the aim of fostering more intimate social relations and through less restrictive design decisions.

Light and colour play a crucial role in this work. A sophisticated interplay of shadows is ideally cast and moulded to three temporal circumstances: the cold of dawn, the warmth of midday and the orange of dusk. There are windows that face in all directions, allowing a choice of multiple daylighting options and high walls are erected to provide shade when the need arises.
 


Villa AM by Mesura. Photograph by Marina Denisova.

Description of project by Mesura

Mies van der Rohe said, “Architecture is the will of an epoch translated into space; living, changing, new. Not yesterday, not tomorrow, only today can be given form.” In Jeddah, the historic centre of Saudi Arabia, something is changing in today’s climate. As the city moves towards a rapid modernization, its architectural values –which protect the singular culture of the area– are starting to disintegrate.
 
Giving shape to today’s Jeddah is a complex endeavour. Its character is rooted in the past, while the mind is set towards the future. Villa AM is the result of a five-year process of closely working with our client, who introduced us to a very special city, community, and architecture. Taking local culture and climate as a tool to seek new spatial relationships, the house aims to answer the will of a changing today.

A changing community, a changing set of values for domestic architecture
Architecture is part of the land it lives in. In Jeddah, this story goes back to the beginning of the country. The city is the historic heart of a modernising Saudi Arabia, which is characterised by a vast amount of vernacular architecture based on an ancient desert and Arabian culture —enriched by the presence of the sea and harbour. Contrary to popular assumptions, Jeddah is not Dubai.

To design in Jeddah’s complexity, it’s vital to understand its traditions, values, and beliefs. Traditionally, the Arabian home functions both as a private sanctuary and social, semi-public space, which constitutes an interesting paradox still defining most of the local architecture today. Villa AM carefully balances its design between preserving the core of this ancient building tradition and manifesting the mindset we find in the community of Jeddah today. The house thus aims to rethink a traditional way of living.

The exterior as an extension of the home and architecture acting as a passive system
In Jeddah, summers are long, sweltering, muggy, and arid, while winters are short, warm, dry, and windy. Aside from their social function, the exterior spaces of Arabian buildings (patios and rooftops) have an essential role in mitigating climatic factors. Since its foundation, the vernacular architecture in Jeddah has used its materials, courtyards and openings in an eco-efficient sense, creating cool and comfortable indoor home environments. Villa AM, in this sense, is no different.

The house looks for shade and breezes of air, which in Jeddah comes from the mythic North-West wind swaying about 10m above the ground. In order to get to that wind, the second floor of the house drops to the back, creating a second patio looking out onto the city and the sunset to the West while alleviating the shape of the volume. Meanwhile, an outside passageway downstairs generates natural cooling across the ground floor.

Privacy and hospitality at home: architecture as a tool to shift perspectives and expectations
The programme of Villa AM reflects the habitual segmentation between guests, family and staff. These are the remnants of an Arabian culture prone to visual privacy, which explains the particular placement and sizes of doors, windows and openings; the control of building heights and balconies; the movement fluxes that vary according to the house user. Therefore, we traditionally find U-shaped houses in Jeddah, which are built around a shared courtyard and house the family on one side and guests on the other, doubling the installations needed for each of them.

Villa AM incorporates the family’s openness, generosity and contemporary mindset. Though privacy is still present in the home’s programme, the house uses its L-shaped form to create a closer relationship between family and guest by blurring its spatial limits and using the garden as in-between areas to connect the two visually. The house thus becomes a fluid entity —an initial step towards a new kind of domestic architecture in Jeddah.

The intensity of the ephemeral: light as an active agent determining architectural atmospheres
Light in Jeddah hits differently. Sunrays easily find their way through the windows and hit the house’s interiors in a very daunting manner. Throughout the day, the place is capable of displaying multiple colour palettes. With sunrise and dusk being the most memorable moments, light in Jeddah goes from the coldness of the first hours to the heat and brightness of noon, finishing with still, peachy-coloured skies when the sun is setting.

Villa AM has been designed in a way that these three moments can be experienced through climate, site-specific architectural decisions. The house is a continuous game of walls setting shade on the right space at the right time. Windows face all four directions, allowing the interiors to receive multiple types of lighting during the day, while exterior passageways are determined by high walls that create shadowed paths, enabling convenient use of these spaces even in the heat. Therefore, light becomes an active agent shaping the usability and mood of Villa AM.

Villa am: a five-year-long cultural conversation and a journey into the unkown
Villa AM’s grandeur doesn’t only lay in its outcome. Memorable moments and crucial decisions have been taken in the process, shaping the house into what it looks like today. In 2016, when the project landed in our studio, we didn’t know what to expect: a challenging distance, a unique culture, and an inability to overview what was going on immediately. Again, designing for the unknown made so much sense.

Reflecting on the unfolding of the house, one can’t help but ponder on the bond forged after five years of ongoing conversations with our client, who has allowed us to investigate without judgment and to make mistakes, helping us to understand and work on his willingness to create something different and unique that fit a set of contemporary values that we, as humans and architects, support as well.

Along the way, lessons, visions, and vernacular know-how have determined the project in unexpected and challenging ways. Differences encountered were seen as advantages, learning how to decode them and turn our vision into a reality that met the client’s expectations, considered the land’s culture and traditions, and aligned with the nation’s vision of contemporaneity. Villa AM isn’t only an architectural statement; it’s a journey of discovery and audacity into the unknown.

More information

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Architects
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Design team
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Marcos Parera Blanch, Jaime Font Furest, Benjamín Iborra Wicksteed, Jordi Espinet Roma, Carlos Dimas Carmona.
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Collaborators
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Falcon Construction.
Campanyà Vinyeta Arquitectes.
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Area
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450 sqm.
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Manufactures
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Grassi Pietre.
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Location
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Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
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Photography
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Mesura is a design studio based in Barcelona, ​​founded by Jordi Espinet, Marcos Parera, Benjamin Iborra, Jaime Font and Carlos Dimas.Together, they are a team of designers, architects, art directors and technical engineers.

In addition to their awarded projects (Peratallada castle and Can Lilmona), Mesura have been selected in the Rising Star (WAN 2018), they have won the AJAC for construction and landscaping (Young Architects of Catalonia), the AR House prize (Casa IV) or the Europan prize, in 2011.

They also teach at the La Salle School of Architecture in Barcelona and have lectured at the Glasgow School of Art, the University of Toledo and the Central Saint Martins.
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Published on: March 10, 2022
Cite: "The warm color of the desert in Villa AM by Mesura " METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/warm-color-desert-villa-am-mesura> ISSN 1139-6415
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