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Front View

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PatioExterior.jpg

Co-Working Area

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Interior-sinestufa.jpg

Backyard Area

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Cam10_Balcon.jpg

Pasillo Pasante

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Azotea

Inside Housing, Living Area

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Swimming Pool Area

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Cam12_Pileta.jpg
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Implantacion

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Section B

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Axonometric View

Drawing

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Axonometric View A

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Axonometric View B

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Implantacion

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Planta Baja

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Backyard Area

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Memory

On a long plot open to the north, with deep views of a eucalyptus plantation, this house is designed in the city of Bragado, Buenos Aires Province. From the outset, the intention was clear: to build a home that accompanies the landscape, that moves naturally along the terrain, and that allows itself to be permeated by time, light, and vegetation.

The house unfolds on a single level—a low line that adapts to the shape of the lot and the path of the sun. Its structure is organized around a series of courtyards that not only articulate the different spaces but also create moments, pauses, and breaths. Some of these courtyards are intimate and sheltered; others are conceived as extensions of the living area, where everyday life can expand outward. Vegetation grows freely in these voids—there is no imposed order; nature is allowed to enter, overflow, and give character to the act of dwelling.

The materiality reinforces this search for lightness and warmth.

 

The house is built primarily in wood—a familiar material that ages with time and speaks to the rural setting. On the southern side, where greater protection is needed, concrete walls appear, providing mass, shelter, and stability. The raised and ventilated roof allows for natural airflow, ensuring freshness during the hottest months without relying on artificial systems.

The decision to paint the house black follows a logic of discretion. Far from seeking prominence, the architecture aims to disappear—into the shadows of the trees, the low horizon line, the rhythm of the landscape. The house does not show off; it allows itself to be lived in.

More than an object, the project proposes a way of being: a serene journey, an experience fragmented by courtyards and open skies, where the built form accompanies, contains, and at the same time yields space to the natural.

Associate Architects

Project Team

Site Direction

Site Execution

Collaborators

Arch. Valeria Jaroz

Arch. Magdalena Dussel

Arch. Florencia Lin

Arch. Pablo Langellotti

Arch. Santiago Estevez

Landscape: Arch. Milagros Ratto

Bragado Housing.
Ongoing

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