Tino House

Tino House
© Milena Villalba

TINO HOUSE

Emac Architecture

LOCATION
Sagunto, Spain

AREA
256 m²

CATEGORY
Houses

LEAD ARCHITECT
Miguel Martínez Castillejo, Pau Batalla Soriano

PHOTOGRAPHS
Milena Villalba

YEAR
2018

CLIENT
Agustín Francisco Gómez-Miranda Villanueva

COLLABORATORS
Lara Llop Font, Rafael Duet, Luis Ros Serrano-TEMCCO

CONSTRUCTOR
Blamacor S.L.

Text description provided by architect.

The access to the house occurs interchangeably through the back and front side of the plot, through two entrance yards with a jacaranda tree and a concrete bench.

Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba

The approaching of the house happens in a frontal and horizontal way, through a vacuum in which the spaces of sun and shadow alternate almost infinitely.

This threshold-gallery invites to cross the house from part to part without having to access the private areas, tangentially crossing the different spaces with a spine-like articulation.

Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba

The proposal can be understood as a single H-shaped house, but also as two modules linked by a gallery, or perhaps by four cells all surrounded by courtyards that guarantee different degrees of privacy and an intense interior-exterior relationship.

The guest module is located to the west. The main courtyard around which the whole is organized is located on the north side.

The service areas are placed to the west as well. The toilets are placed on the north side while the corridors are on the south side.

Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba

The living spaces open up with large sliding doors. This arrangement allows long visuals in the two axes of the house as well as cross-ventilation.

The house is materialized by load-bearing walls based on 39.19.19cm water-repellent concrete blocks, armed and not locked.

Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba

Crowned by a beam of the same width of 19m with thick girders of 106cm, salvaging a maximum amount of light.

The public circulation areas are accompanied by floors of bare scrubbed concrete slabs.The private spaces are clad with painted laminated plasterboard, coated DM panelling.

Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba

And small grain terrazzo tiles distinguishing the "grey and rough" exterior from the "white and delicate" interior.

The cane lattices, the concrete and the water that the gargoyles pour over the courtyards allude directly to the Marjal and Almardà beach.

Tino House
© Milena Villalba
Tino House
© Milena Villalba


Tino House
Ground Floor
Tino House
Roof Plans


Tino House
Sections
Tino House
Diagrams