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House in Sotogrande, Spain by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Project name:
House in Sotogrande
Architecture firm:
Fran Silvestre Arquitectos
Location:
Sotogrande, Spain
Photography:
Fernando Guerra. Video: Jesús Orrico
Principal architect:
Design team:
Fran Silvestre, Carlos Lucas, Paco Chinesta, Neus Roso
Collaborators:
María Masià, Pablo Camarasa, Ricardo Candela, Estefania Soriano, Sevak Asatrián, Andrea Baldo, Angelo Brollo, Paloma Feng, Javi Herrero, Gino Brollo, Facundo Castro, Anna Alfanjarín, Laura Bueno, Toni Cremades, Susana León, David Cirocchi, Nuria Doménech, Andrea Raga, Olga Martín, Víctor González, Pepe Llop, Alberto Bianchi, Lucía Domingo, Pablo Simò, Andrea Blasco, Laura Palacio, Carlos Perez, Jovita Cortijo, Claudia Escorcia, Ana Bono, Andrea García, Diana Murcia, Fran Ayala. Ana de Pablo | Financial & Administration Dept. Director. Sara Atienza | Marketing & PR Dept. Director. José María Ibañez | Business developer CCG y México. Valeria Fernandini | Financial Department. Sandra Mazcuñán | Management Department
Interior design:
Alfaro Hofmann
Built area:
802 m²
Site area:
3520 m²
Design year:
Completion year:
Civil engineer:
Agustín Jiménez Suárez
Structural engineer:
Estructuras Singulares
Environmental & MEP:
Landscape:
Lighting:
Supervision:
Adán Bolaños
Visualization:
Tools used:
Construction:
Mar State Construction
Material:
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Private
Status:
Complete
Typology:
Residential › House

Fran Silvestre Arquitectos: Located in front of the Sotogrande golf course, the layout of this house invites us to experience the shadow between the ground plane and the roof that extends over it. A generous roof cantilever that not only offers shelter from the intense sun of Cadiz, but also protects from the copious rains that descend from the Sierra de Grazalema, the place with the highest rainfall in the Iberian Peninsula.

In the deep interior of the building, a wooden volume is generated, giving the rooms the necessary privacy while providing the desired warmth in every corner. Four different limits emerge that define the spatiality of the house: the ground plane, the shadow generated by the architectural cantilever, the glass that allows efficient climatic conditioning of the interior, and finally, the cozy limit of the wood.

Access to the house is from the upper street, a strategic point that offers a privileged view of the water mirror and the landscape. This feature in the roof works as thermal and acoustic insulation. The layer of water regulates the temperature of the building, works as an insulator, absorbs heat during the day and slowly releases it at night, reducing the need for heating and air conditioning.

One of he requirements of the house was that the materials used in the house had a warm tone. Internally, the compact program is distributed through a central communication core that encompases the skylights that illuminate the central spaces and allow access to the upper water mirror.

The roof planes and the ground level plane are carefully moved to generate a covered access that invites to enter, as well as an endless pool that extends over the golf course. The aim is to have the minimum impact on the environment, to live between two planes, promoting the experience of something as simple as an inhabited shadow in Sotogrande.


By Alfredo Gonzalez

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