Arkosis

House In El Sesteo

House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio

HOUSE IN EL SESTEO

Arkosis

ARCHITECTS
Arkosis

PHOTOGRAPHS
Roberto D´Ambrosio

ARCHITECT IN CHARGE
Iván Delgado

COLLABORATORS
Ma. Fernanda Matamoros, Cristian Alvarez, Carlos Jiménez, Jeffrey Cubero

CATEGORY
Houses

LOCATION
San Ramon, Costa Rica

PROJECT YEAR
2016

Text description provided by architect.

The house intends to reflect the general spirit of the site as understood from its history, in this case it relates more to its origin as a "sesteo" than to its more ostentatious present.

House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio

A sesteo was the place where oxcart drivers would spend the night after a long journey; this name lingered on and was given to the current upper-middle class community.

Fantastic Realism allows the argument to be a real fact, to which "an illusory or fantastic ingredient" is added.

House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio

An imaginary archeology is the excuse to unearth ancient walls, traces of a possible past that will support the present-future of the house.

These concrete walls are the monolithic base and the conceptual opposite of a collection of materials that show their industrial edges and assemblage, as a reference to the continuous bricolage that takes place in the majority of Costa Rican neighborhoods, here material progress means not only to acquire more appliances or cars, but also construction materials that are set on top of each other in apparent disorder, their individuality as single industrial pieces still readable... added space; alteration here means expansion most of the time.

House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio

This procedure could be regarded as a meta language, not because it describes architectural language but because it precedes it.

It also implies reducing the mediation of constructional lexicon and focusing on space as a direct consequence of the accumulation of materials.

In practical terms, the cost of the house was slightly under $ 600 per square meter, the bottom of the intermediate price range in the country, mainly due to the use of inexpensive materials and progressive finishes.

House In El Sesteo
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio

Another interest is the paradoxical uninhabited architecture which remains empty while the owners work to pay for it, a distinct phenomenon in Costa Rican middle class.

As a response the house lights up in particular ways in the mornings and the afternoons when the owners are present.

The challenge of using west and east as the source of light is chosen with a deep and staggered layout in order to identify the most recognizably distinct lights from each other.

House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio


House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio


House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio
House In El Sesteo
© Roberto D´Ambrosio


House In El Sesteo
Long Section
House In El Sesteo
Cross Section


House In El Sesteo
West Elevation
House In El Sesteo
North Elevation


House In El Sesteo
Plan 1
House In El Sesteo
Plan 2


House In El Sesteo
Detail
House In El Sesteo
Construction Details

Arkosis
T +506 7107 9050
Arkosis
Alajuela Province, San Ramón, Costa Rica