Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Architecture and Home Design

Architecture and Home Design


Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos, in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Posted: 10 Jun 2013 09:44 PM PDT

Pumacahua Housing is designed by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos, located in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
The building is constructed as an overlapping stratum between two dividing plates. Every level shelters four units, except the last one, where the system is altered and appears a substructure that expresses the atypical existence of units inside the set. The whole constructed volume is recessed from the front line, in order to obtain the maximum height permitted. On the front, an access volume gets back to re-compose this line. Each level is composed by four units and a central core linking them. This layout organization, around a court obtains ideal lighting both in the departments and in the access hall. The vertical core finishes off in a metallic structure composed by a bridge and a battery of stairs that forms an ad hoc structure that allows the access to the terraces of each one of the two storey units. The concrete structure, arranged in partitions and slabs without girders, remains absorbed inside the internal and dividing walls between units, and the thicknesses of the slab. The efforts are transmitted directly towards the foundations without any type of transition. Structural engineering by Nicastro Associates.

Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos in Buenos Aires Argentina 1 Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos, in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos in Buenos Aires Argentina 2 Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos, in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos in Buenos Aires Argentina 3 Pumacahua Housing Design by Canda Gazaneo Ungar Arquitectos, in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects, Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy

Posted: 10 Jun 2013 09:43 AM PDT

Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy 1 Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects, Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy

There are times when people should mingle within the neighborhood. Those kinds of situation were being carefully considered by GRAFT's Make It Right (MIR) Project Designers when they came up with the Camelback houses — they all have a strong connection between the private interior zone and the shared public space on the street. Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy, the Camelback houses bring in a better environment, economical, and society combination. It's the futuristic approach that got us sold in the first place.

Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy 2 Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects, Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy

Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy 3 Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects, Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy

Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy 4 Camelback Houses by GRAFT Architects, Inspired by the cradle to cradle philosophy

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