Located in a neighborhood in the northeast area of the city of Madrid, the Madrid studio Pachón–Paredes has designed the refurbishment and renovation of House No. 1, a dark and compartmentalized dwelling dating back to 1978.

Intending to frame a neutral canvas where the inhabitants and their objects inhabit and fill the spaces with color, the project provides neutral spaces that can adapt to genealogical changes and their spatial consequences.
The Pachón-Paredes project consists of the transformation of a highly compartmentalized and dark space into an open and illuminated one. 

With a staircase that was a spatial and lighting obstacle, this drawback becomes an opportunity. It becomes an essential heterogeneous element in the spatial solution, as well as the heart of the house. It becomes a vertebral element of spaces.

Multiplying, filtering, and regulating the warmth of the light thanks to the materials used, the project results in a new configuration that responds to the needs of its inhabitants, who were looking for a space to live, work, and enjoy together.
 

Description of project by Pachón–Paredes

Time

HOUSE No.1 is the transformation, refurbishment and adaptation of the interior, exterior and in-between spaces of a dark and compartmentalised 1978 house. The new configuration responds to the needs of its users, who were looking for a space to live, work, play sports and enjoy both as a family and individually. In the proposal neutral spaces are used to adapt to genealogical changes and their spatial consequences. 

The house, with 3 floors + attic, fits a rectangle of 16m x 9m, which is distorted by patios, terraces and balconies. Each level is divided longitudinally into two bays of 3.5m and 5.5m, with a difference in height of 86cm. The goal is to transform a highly compartmentalised and dark space into an open and light-filled space, where the staircase, which was a spatial and lighting obstacle, becomes an essential heterogeneous space.

Space

In the short axis, the typical partition walls to separate the 86cm difference in height are replaced by "L" shaped elements, that act as an extension of the staircase itself, and level the height difference. At the same time, these elements contain the structure, the storage systems and create interior windows, which in turn allow privacy regulation between spaces, becoming scenographies where users are both protagonists and spectators. In the long axis, the proposal connects both facades, laying out the uses in sequence, improving ventilation and simplifying horizontal communication, while unfolding as a 16-meter-long continuous piece of furniture that is a domestic infrastructure: containing storage, art-display, facilities/fixtures and furnishing. The 86cm intra-level separation highlights the movement and "public" use of the staircase, and becomes a useful space: steps, shelves, benches, etc... In parallel, the user can move vertically in a more "private" way by means of the hidden lift, thus guaranteeing accessibility on all levels.

Matter

The aim is to give the new spaces as much light, clarity and neutrality as possible. Materials are chosen to multiply, filter and regulate the warmth of light. Thus, framing a neutral canvas, which the inhabitants and their objects fill with colour. The staircase, the heart of the dwelling and the backbone of the spaces, is configured with solid steps made of campaspero stone that contrasts with the light brass handrail. This handrail is the result of a geometric study and reinterpretation of the existing handrails on the outside of the dwelling and in other modern and post-modern architecture in the surrounding neighbourhoods. The floorplan, as an extension of the staircase, is built entirely with the same materials, albeit with 4 different layouts, giving it dynamism, texture and ease of execution.

Energy

Five strategies are implemented to minimise energy consumption:

1. Optimisation of space and distribution of uses to generate cross ventilation on all levels.

2. Insulation of the building skin from the inside, and from the outside by dismantling interstitial insulation and restoring the slate roof, thus keeping the original exterior appearance intact. 

3. Mixed wood-aluminium exterior frames with double glazing allowing passiv-haus thermal inertia.

4. Optimisation of the air-conditioning systems of the house with an aerothermal system with heat recovery, supported with solar thermal panels for the production and total demand of hot water, integrated in the slate roof. The house is climatized by underfloor heating/cooling with anhydrite support, reducing thermal inertia.

5. External solar protection with adjustable slatted blinds.

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Architects
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Pachón–Paredes. Architects.- Luis G. Pachón, Inés García de Paredes.
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Collaborators
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Technical Director.- José García Gallego. Construction architect.- Marina Cantos Mateos. Construction manager.- Susana Izquierdo. Technical Architect.- Ángel García. Structures consultant.- Pedro Atanasio Utrilla.
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Builder
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Developer
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Private.
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Area
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Housing.- 516 m². Front yard.- 43 m². Backyard.- 53 m².
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Dates
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2021.
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Location
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Nueva España neighborhood, Madrid, Spain.
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Photography
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Luis Asín.
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Studio Pachón-Paredes is an architectural practice based in Madrid, founded in 2020 by Luis G. Pachón and Inés García de Paredes. Their work focuses on the relative synergies between space, time, matter and energy in architecture and society, developing processes of interpretation, adaptation and transformation of local traditions and types, translating them to present and future techniques, functions and contexts. 

Since 2015, they have actively worked with international offices such as Tuñon Arquitectos, Paredes Pedrosa or estudioHerreros. They combine practice with academics at Università IUAV di Venezia Wa.Ve,  teaching graduate and undergraduate studios & workshops; Canadian Carleton University-ETSAM bilateral winter workshops. They have lectured in different institutions, at ETSAM Polytechnic University of Madrid, IUAV di Venezia and Escola da Cidade in Sao Paolo. Their work has been awarded and exhibited at the 16th and 17th Venice Architecture Biennale, COAM Madrid, BEAU XIII Spanish Architecture-Urbanism Biennale, Iberoamerican Historical and Cultural Patrimony PHI; EME3 collapse international architecture festival, ETSAM. Their projects, writings and collaborations have been published in several magazines, books and various digital platforms.

Luis G. Pachón holds a Masters in Architecture with Honors from the Polytechnic University of Madrid. He also studied at DIDA Università degli Studi di Firenze and IaaC Barcelona. Awarded with honors final thesis at the ETSAM UPM, 2015. COAM pfc 1st Prize granted by the Architects Association of Madrid, 2015. He obtained a fellowship by UPM in the Master MPAA.

Inés García de Paredes holds a Masters in Architecture with Honors from the Polytechnic University of Madrid. She also studied at DIDA Università degli Studi di Firenze and IaaC Barcelona. Awarded With Honors PFC at the ETSAM UPM, 2015. COAM Heritage PFC 1st Prize granted by the Architects Association of Madrid, 2015. Iberoamerican Historical and Cultural Patrimony PHI Award 2nd prize, 2016. XIII BEAU Spanish Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism final thesis Award, 2016.
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Published on: January 10, 2022
Cite: "Hybrid habitat spaces. House No. 1 by Pachón–Paredes" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/hybrid-habitat-spaces-house-no-1-pachon-paredes> ISSN 1139-6415
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