Tejona House

Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati

TEJONA HOUSE

Martín Dulanto Arquitecto

COLLABORATORS
Micaela Elliot, Adriana Olivares, Luis Navarrete

PROJECT MANAGER
Miguel Gutiérrez

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Jorge Avendaño

MANUFACTURERS
ALVARO ARAMBURU, Casa Rosselló, HYDREX S.A., KITCHEN STUDIO, Lumicenter, Meglio
, VENTANIA DEPOT SAC, YANEZ INGENIEROS

INTERIOR DESIGN
Giselle Sersen

AREA
903 m²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Cieneguilla, Peru

CATEGORY
Houses, Decoration & Ornament

Text description provided by architect.

This project is conceived with the premise of minimizing its impact on the environment, seeking to link all its spaces with the surrounding nature. It aims to generate the atmosphere of a temporary temple taken over by vegetation.

Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati

A temple that worships life, as the daily activities of those who live there unfold.

A specific treatment has been sought for each area of the architectural program, resulting in a distinct and different character for each part of the whole.

Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati

The project itself is a reinforced concrete exoskeleton, consisting of a double-height table supported by an ambulatory peptide structure around it.

The interior contains a large reticulated and glazed box. This box includes the main spaces of the program and allows one to contemplate the exterior.

Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati

This large box, in turn, contains other loose boxes of an opaque character inside it, which in turn contain the most intimate and private programs.

The exoskeleton supports the house at a structural level, creates a pre-filter between the interior and the exterior, and functions as an interstitial and transitional space.

Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati

A link between nature and architecture and an eave prior to the glazed facades of the box that lies inside it.

The glazed box contains the spaces that enjoy a view of the outside.

These enclosures can be opened or closed as needed and are protected from the elements by the same glass that connects them to the exterior.

Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati

The smaller opaque boxes are distributed within the glass parallelepiped, containing the service areas.

The boxes are strategically distributed between the open spaces, and in contrast to these, present a more closed character, with coatings extracted from nature.


Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati


Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati
Tejona House
© Renzo Rebagliati


Tejona House
Floor Plan Basement
Tejona House
Floor Plan First Floor
Tejona House
Floor Plan Second Floor