House with a curved wall | Fala

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House with a curved wall | Fala

Information

  • Project Name: House with a curved wall
  • Practice: fala
  • Completion year: 2017
  • Gross Built up Area: 95 sqm
  • Project Location: Porto
  • Country: Portugal
  • Design Team: filipe magalhães, Ana luisa soares, Ahmed belkhodja, Julia andreychenko, Rute Peixoto, Lera samovich, Elisa sassi, Paulo sousa
  • Photo Credits: pomo
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Excerpt: House with a curved wall, designed by fala, transforms decrepit original construction to the bare structural existence of its perimeter walls. A sequence of rooms of various sizes and forms hides behind the new wall and a wide window frames the rediscovered garden. The wall facing the street was extended to balance its proportions and the entrance door painted in heavy salmon-pink; the greenish-blue gate, when closed, completes the deconstructed composition.

Project Description

[Text as submitted by architect] Within an extremely low budget, the decrepit original construction was reset to the bare structural existence of its perimeter walls. The inner space was solved with the precise placement of a gently curved wall as a separation between the public and private programs under a new light roof. The intersection of the existing perimeter walls, the sloped ceiling and the added curve resulted in a complex geometrical form. A sequence of rooms of various sizes and forms hides behind the new wall and a wide window frames the rediscovered garden.

House with a curved wall | Fala
© fala
House with a curved wall | Fala
© pomo
House with a curved wall | Fala
© pomo

The main space, loosely populated by furniture, showcases four blue doors, a circular opening, various plants and a slender metal pole that symbolically marks the highest point of the otherwise humble construction. A selected number of elements were painted in strong colours contrasting with the general abstract whiteness of the room.

House with a curved wall | Fala
© pomo
House with a curved wall | Fala
© pomo

The wall facing the street was extended to balance its proportions and the entrance door painted in heavy salmon-pink; the greenish-blue gate, when closed, completes the deconstructed composition. A thin metal surface extends over the white volume as if made of paper: the light metal roof becomes the prominent urban element defining the image of the house, its ‘houseness’.While the interiors form a unity characterised by whiteness and precision, the outside expression is that of a loose juxtaposition of constructive elements. Ultimately the house is a rather conventional building, but unusually vivid.

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