Passive House in Arteaga

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

Passive House in Arteaga

Lopez Rivera

ARCHITECT
Lopez Rivera

BUILDING SUPERVISORS
Jordi Carbonell, Andrés Fernández

INSTALLATIONS
Hobeki Ingenieria

LEAD ARCHITECT
Emiliano López, Mónica Rivera

COLLABORATORS
Sara Navazo, Mikel Soro, Marc Mallorquí, Albert Farell, Jaime Gutierrez, Sergio Azpíroz

STRUCTURE
Bis Structures, Egoin

ENERGY CONSULTANT
Iñaki Del Prim

CONSTRUCTORS
Bermeosolo Egoin

BERMEOSOLO EGOIN
Egoin

PHOTOGRAPHS
José Hevia

AREA
363 m²

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Gautegiz Arteaga, Spain

CATEGORY
Houses, Detail

Text description provided by architect.

The house is located on the buildable outskirts of Gautegiz Arteaga in the surroundings of the wetlands of the Urdaibai biosphere reserve.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

The watershed formed by the Oka and Golako rivers flows into Mundaka, where they form an extensive estuary flanked by beaches.

The climate is humid and temperate with rainfall throughout the year, although less frequent in the summer months.

The site follows the curved path of the Bo Orueta road on its east and north sides and is limited by rustic sceneries on its south side.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

The structure is made of laminated larch wood. The insulations are made of wood fibers and cork. The facade and roof cladding are of acetylated pine wood finished with a gray silicate-based mineral patina.

Passivhaus standards have been followed in the design and construction of the house, insulating the four ventilated sides of the exterior envelope extensively.

With the sum of these measures, a 75% reduction in heating and cooling consumption is achieved compared to a standard home.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

The house is located on a lot on the southern buildable limit of Arteaga.

The house accompanies the Bo Orueta road following its concave shape towards the south and adapting to the gentle slope of the terrain without hardly modifying or touching it.

Its shape is irregular and it has a slightly descending slope from south to north.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

Large limestone rocks from Markina resting on ballast-filled pits raise the entire house off the ground allowing the ground to stay intact and the air to flow under the house.

The access to the house is through the central part of the north convex side through a large open hallway that provides shelter for vehicles and the main access to the house.

Inside, forty-six instances of different sizes corresponding to a varying degree of intimacy are concatenated throughout the house.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

Larger common spaces are complemented by smaller intimate spaces that shelter the individual without segregating them from the rest of the inhabitants.

The overall wood construction accentuates the feeling of shelter throughout the house connecting with the body of the inhabitant in the spaces where the house becomes a piece of furniture.

The gabled roof that covers the entire house expels the rain creating an intense curtain in front of the large windows when collecting the water on the perimeter of the house at ground level.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

External solar protections made of horizontal roll-up slats of Soria pine have been incorporated in the areas with the most intense solar exposure in the summer.

Very hermetic enclosures have been used with triple low-e glass and a total absence of thermal bridges and air leaks.

The extraction and supply of air from the house is constant and controlled by means of a double-flow mechanical ventilation system that incorporates.

A heat recuperator to transfer part of the energy contained in the stale extraction air to the fresh air that is introduced into the house.

Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia
Passive House in Arteaga
© José Hevia

The house obtained the class A energy rating with an energy consumption of 22.43 kWh/m2 per year and emissions of 3.83 kg of CO2/m2 per year.

The power contracted with the electricity company is 4.6 Kw.


Passive House in Arteaga
Floor Plan
Passive House in Arteaga
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Passive House in Arteaga
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Passive House in Arteaga
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