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Jungle Keva, Tulum, Mexico by Jaque Studio

Project name:
Jungle Keva
Architecture firm:
Jaque Studio
Location:
Tulum, Mexico
Photography:
Cesar Bejar
Principal architect:
Jesus Acosta
Design team:
Victor Rosete, Everardo Castro
Built area:
428 m²
Site area:
1,000 m²
Design year:
2018
Completion year:
2019
Collaborators:
Fernando Abogado
Interior design:
Jaque Studio
Civil engineer:
Structural engineer:
Environmental & MEP:
Landscape:
Hugo Sanchez
Lighting:
Jaque Studio
Supervision:
Visualization:
Tools used:
Construction:
Ceiba Inmobiliaria
Material:
Concrete, chukum, concrete block, wood, travertine marble
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Kendall Inman
Status:
Built
Typology:
Hospitality › Hotel

Jaque Studio: Situated in Tulum, this small boutique hotel rises between the trees, in which the main concept consisted in preserving 70% of the existing vegetation in order to build around it. By achieving this, every space of the project is always in relation to its natural surroundings.

The hotel has five 50 m² lodges, formed by a double height room, a mezzanine or “tapanco”, a terrace and an indoor-outdoor bathroom. At the back of the lot the social areas are located, with a dining space and yoga pavilion hanging in cantilever over the pool. The main idea of this water element is to be extruded from the ground in between the vegetation. For this reason, two old zapote trees were preserved, which look as they were rising from the pool itself. 

All the project is composed by local materials, as well as low maintenance and natural textures, which provide a warm atmosphere to the buildings. A particular finish found on the walls is “chukum”, a Mayan stucco characteristic of the region, which uses a tree resin to give its distinctive color, appearance and durability. The objective was to use materials that age with dignity, so that with the passing of time the architecture acquires character and a deeper sense of belonging.

The different volumes of the complex are scattered along the lot, between the trees and stone paths, which provide a sensation of being in a small village in the Mayan jungle. Throughout the design process there was a search for pure forms and natural materials that could blend with the surrounding context. In a sense, Jungle Keva is like an abstraction or simplification of vernacular architecture, easy to read, simple and with a social, natural and economic conscience.


By Liliana Alvarez

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