Tajin 413 Building
TAJIN 413 BUILDING
Cometrue
ARCHITECTS
Cometrue
ENGINEERING
Dae Juan F. Heredia Mellado
LEAD ARCHITECT
Jaime Miranda González
DESIGN TEAM
Jaime Miranda, Andrés Ozorno, Karina Schwartzman
LANDSCAPE
Schwartzman/bueso
MANUFACTURERS
Cemex, Crivial, Helvex, Interceramic, Mabe, Rotoplas, Tecnorampa, Teka, Tekno-step
COLABORATORS
Lilly Armenta, Guillermo López, Unik, Jorge Morales, Manuel Romero, David Pérez,
José L. Bustos, Alejandro Hernández, Rigel Ferreira
CIVIL CONSTRUCTION
Adán Cortés Gaytán
PHOTOGRAPHS
Onnis Luque, Ariadna Polo
YEAR
2021
AREA
1372 m²
LOCATION
Ciudad De México, Mexico
CATEGORY
Residential
Text description provided by architect.
Tajín 413 is located in Narvarte neighborhood in Mexico City.
The idea was clear: to generate 8 dwellings on a rectangular lot, distributed over 4 habitable levels, a semi-basement for parking, and on the rooftop an area that could be used as a coexistence area.
The slender shape of the building and the idea of generating spaces free of walls where the kitchen, dining room, and living room could be unified, led the architectural program, to place four exterior and four interior dwellings.
The building was divided into 2 housing containers in exposed concrete, articulated by a central courtyard and a rear courtyard that in addition to providing natural lighting and ventilation, provides design.
The central courtyard is used by both housing containers, linked by open-air circulations, the openings of the interior facade are overlapped to give privacy and achieve greater expression.
At the back, we generated another courtyard, a space that in addition to natural lighting and ventilation gives special tranquility, accompanied by amber light reflections delivered by handmade white clay brick.
The terraces are the main axis of the building’s design; we looked for generous terraces that could be integrated into the living space of each dwelling.
They are designed along with the vegetation, which was planted from the first stages of construction, seeking to grow along with the building so that at the end of the work it would be rooted to the space. The vegetal palette responds to each space and, above all, to the amount of sunlight they receive.
The exterior facade is defined by solar and noise filters, made up of blind balconies of exposed concrete, pigmented in earth color, and formed with reused wood; jasmines as sun vegetation and a steel lattice to protect from the sun.
We included detail in the edges of the exposed concrete slabs and tried to create stony tectonics with vegetation to blend in with the two yuccas in front of the building.