Celina House

Celina House
© Obralinda

CELINA HOUSE

TAM - Guillermo Elgart

CATEGORY
Houses

LOCATION
Mar Del Plata, Argentina

AREA
65 m²

PHOTOGRAPHS
Obralinda

LEAR ARCHITECT
Guillermo Elgart

MANUFACTURERS
AutoDesk, Adobe, Casa Blanco, Cerrosud, Pasalto Hormigon, Pintureria "Del centro", Trimble Navigation

DESIGN TEAM
Juan Albarenque, Andrés López.

CLIENTS
Alejandro Montoya

COLLABORATORS
Juan Manuel Blanco Peralta, Juan Icarde.

ENGINEERING
Felipe Otárola

YEAR
2020

Text description provided by architect.

A little house built on a piece of land in the neighborhood of Santa Celina, in the south of Mar del Plata . The area is known for its abundance of trees and greenery.

The property is centrally located on a Pampean-Argentinian block. The site is unique as it contains an atypical level drop towards the main street. To the front, a wide tree-lined street. To the back, facing north, a picturesque green pedestrian space.

Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda

The house is compact. Although it has limited floor space, the design manages to offer multiple circulation paths which all converge in a central semi-sunken courtyard.

An impressive structure encloses the house. Both the design and construction methods are simple. The front and rear facades feature a series of inverted concrete beams that cantilever from the slab on the roof level offering an eye-catching design element.

Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda

These beams are supported by a double line of structural steel columns which are laid parallel to the property line, offering both a design feature and a structural purpose.

A concrete canopy, on the second floor, folds towards the site boundaries forming an arch, defining and enclosing the whole space.

Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda

A deck, on level one, is hung through a steel tensor system exposing a series of double-height columns. The structure is the essence of the house, without the requirement for additional decorative elements.

The concept of this project was based on the exploration of spatial design. Vanishing points are featured throughout the space under a single plane: the concrete canopy.

Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda

Levels & limits are blurred, there is no inside or outside, and space flows freely without constraints. The house presents itself as a meaningful space in which all the different components complement each other. The build represents the art of minimalism.

The house develops without definition of levels, it is in space. The living room is the floor and it is the armchair and it is the exterior and it is the deck and it is the gallery and the park is below and above. COURT.

Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda

The most sought after relationship is the spatial one. The omnipresent shell links all spaces and orders them.

They are all under it. EVERYBODY. Those to be and those to circulate.

The gallery and the grill area, the car, and even the trees are contained under and within the structural game... the spaces look at each other... LIVING WITH THE MINIMUM AS IF IT WERE THE MAXIMUM.

Celina House
© Obralinda


Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda
Celina House
© Obralinda


Celina House
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Celina House
Views
Celina House
Section
Celina House
Plan - Ground floor


Celina House
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Celina House
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Celina House
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