La Solana House

LA SOLANA HOUSE

HGR Arquitectos + Diana Arnau

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

ARCHITECTS
Diana Arnau, HGR Arquitectos

AREA
1050 m²

YEAR
2016

PHOTOGRAPHS
Diana Arnau

CONSTRUCTION
Andrés Rozada + Juan Rozada

MANUFACTURERS
Toto, Acor, Construlita, Esloventanas, Showroom 53, Valvo, Cocinas Sevilla

STRUCTURAL DESIGN
BASAM Estructural

LOCATION
Acapulco, Mexico

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

Text description provided by architect.

It has 5 bedrooms, each of them with closets, bathroom and terrace, a family room, kitchen, living room, dinning room, pool, outdoor bar and parking for 3 cars, with a total consruction of 1050 sqm, divided into 3 levels that adjust to the topography.

La Solana consists of a renovation and extention of a house built in the 60’s by Oscar and Eduardo Hagerman.

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

The house is located on an exclusive area overlooking the Acapulco bay. The house is set on a 1210 sqm rocky, sloping ground.

The project consists of 3 volumes. The first, upper volume, is the access and parking. Going down the stairs you reach the second volume, with 2 levels.

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

On the upper level and through a private terrace you have the main bedroom, The lower level has 2 mirrored bedrooms, wich you enter through a deck terrace/corridor.

Descending half a level you find the third volume. On the upper floor you have the main living/dinning room completely opened, and the kitchen.

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

Below this space there are 2 more rooms with their respective terrace and private garden.

At the end of the terrace you reach the family room, a more closed space with a TV room, dinning table, kitchenette and bathroom.

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

The room’s façade is made of glass doors to take advantage of the views to the bay. A wooden courtain was placed in front of the windows to give those rooms privacy.

The courtain also evoques the courtains the original house had, commonly used in Acapulco houses on the 60’s. 

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

The fixed furniture such as beds and closets were designed to integrate with each space.The main living/dinning room has the least changes,

To maintain some of the original escence. Glass railings were instaled to open the views to the ocean.The courtain folds depending on the light and privacy the user wants.

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

The vegetation of the place remained untouched, it provides shadow to the house and keeps the temperature cool.

The stairs and structural walls are made of stone collected from the site, and the new structure is composed of circular steel columns.

La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau

New vegetation was planted to give greener views and more privacy.

The pool area, wich has a jacuzzi and a bar, articulates this two volumes.


La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau


La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau


La Solana House
© Diana Arnau
La Solana House
© Diana Arnau


La Solana House
Elevation
La Solana House
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La Solana House
Plan
La Solana House
Plan