Block House | Estudio IRA

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Block House | Estudio IRA

Information

  • Project Name: Block House
  • Practice: Estudio IRA
  • Products: Corblock , ferrum , Peisa , Aluar , Sketchup , Lumion , Autocad , Adobe Photoshop
  • Completion year: 2022
  • Gross Built up Area: 175 m2
  • Project Location: Alvear
  • Country: Argentina
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Gazzitano Gustavo , Gonzalez German
  • Collaborators: Manuel Quiroga
  • Photo Credits: Walter Salcedo
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Excerpt: Block House by Estudio IRA is a project showcasing the stereotomic volumetry of concrete block brick through its porous and imperfect texture. A duality between the pure and the imperfect combines the character of the house and its unique expressive potential, giving it a solid and austere language. Silence predominates inside, the texture fades, and the colour white takes centre stage, providing purity and unity to the whole.

Project Description

Block House | Estudio IRA
Horizontal framing © Walter Salcedo

[Text as submitted by architect] On the outside, the stereotomic volumetry of concrete block brick prevails with its porous and imperfect texture. The continuous lines of the exposed beams cut the redundancy of the block and complement the visual link with the cantilevered plane of the façade, providing the tectonic quota to the whole to balance the formal composition. Silence predominates inside, the texture fades, and the colour white takes centre stage, acting as the articulating link of the work, providing purity and unity to the whole.

Block House | Estudio IRA
Interior perspective © Walter Salcedo
Block House | Estudio IRA
Axonometry © Estudio IRA
Block House | Estudio IRA
View filters © Walter Salcedo

A duality between the pure and the imperfect combines the character of the house and its unique expressive potential, giving it a solid and austere language. Generate the relationship with the landscape through matter; make matter part of the landscape. Inside, the visuals provided by the rotated block filter the landscape in a peculiar frame. From the outside, the artificial light that the work emanates through its holes enhances the urban fabric in the dark.

Block House | Estudio IRA
facade detail and gallery perspective © Walter Salcedo
Block House | Estudio IRA
Ground Floor Plan and First Floor Plan © Estudio IRA
Block House | Estudio IRA
Interior – exterior © Walter Salcedo

Faced with the opportunity to materialise a work on a domestic scale, the designers intend to carry out a series of project and executive tests, venturing into the search for new meanings for a common element in Latin American construction culture.

The choice of concrete block masonry as the main material component allows the designers to continue investigating and reinterpreting the technical versatility of a traditional brick that makes it possible to adapt the spatial qualities according to the needs of use of the daily actions of the human habitat (walking, producing, serving, being, resting, observing, and contemplating) and put them in relation to the space in which they develop to delve into experimental themes such as the interior-exterior link, levels of intimacy, visual permeability, dosed lighting gradation, and the feeling of protection.

Block House | Estudio IRA
sun filters and Kitchen © Walter Salcedo
Block House | Estudio IRA
Sections © Estudio IRA
Block House | Estudio IRA
textures © Walter Salcedo

The material as an envelope seeks to offer a reading of “constructive unity”, where there are no walls or windows. With the simple gesture of turning the brick, the lattice is recreated, trying to solve different situations, such as sifting the visuals to the environment, regulating the passage of sunlight, levelling natural ventilation, and above all, the contemporary problem of insecurity that makes the designers reflect on the choice of materials to protect the fragile access points of the house, these being an inherent theme of the project to be complementary, anticipating that are not subsequent and/or unrelated to the work.

Block House | Estudio IRA
Kitchen detail © Walter Salcedo
Block House | Estudio IRA
Night gallery © Walter Salcedo
Block House | Estudio IRA
Interior front © Walter Salcedo

The search for technical and spatial decisions points to rigorous levels of definition, with which the advantages and disadvantages of the material must be understood. On the one hand, it is beneficial due to its low cost, rapid execution, and low maintenance; on the other, the designers also had to resolve the problem of thermal and acoustic insulation. They understood that cross ventilation and solar orientations would be fundamental factors to collaborate with the weaknesses of the brick and establish better habitable comfort.

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