1. Home
  2. /
  3. Houses
  4. /
  5. Guapuruvus House, São Roque, São Paulo, Brazil by Cornetta A...

Guapuruvus House, São Roque, São Paulo, Brazil by Cornetta Arquitetura

Project name:
Guapuruvus House
Architecture firm:
Cornetta Arquitetura
Location:
São Roque, São Paulo, Brazil
Photography:
Pedro Kok
Principal architect:
Pedro Cornetta
Design team:
Cornetta Arquitetura
Collaborators:
Renan Antiqueira, Luigi Borges Campos
Interior design:
Cornetta Arquitetura
Built area:
212 m²
Site area:
1600 m²
Design year:
2021
Completion year:
2023
Civil engineer:
Pedro Neto de Queiroz Lima
Structural engineer:
Redwood
Environmental & MEP:
Latar Engenharia
Landscape:
Nick Sabey
Lighting:
Cornetta Arquitetura
Supervision:
Pedro Cornetta
Visualization:
Cornetta Arquitetura
Tools used:
Revit
Construction:
Pedro Neto de Queiroz Lima
Material:
Glulam (glue laminated timber), NLT (nailed laminated timber), steel structure, light steel framing (walls), concrete, masonry
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Private
Status:
Built
Typology:
Residential Architecture › Single Family House

Cornetta Arquitetura: This summer house is an interesting laboratory for ecological practices in architecture, engineering and landscaping. The idea behind this house is to bring adventure to family life, allowing great contact with nature, especially for children. The motto was to create a modern cabin “in the woods” that allows parents to “camp” with their daughters on the weekends.

The land consists of native forest and more than 70% of its extension has been preserved. For the suppression area, the region with the least vegetation was chosen, in a location that had already received previous intervention. The adoption of the elevated house, as well as the creation of a service floor “embedded” in the topography, is based on the analysis of the natural profile.

The project can be divided into two very distinct stages. The first stage, comprising the entire basement of the house which includes retaining walls, laundry room, storage room, solarium and swimming pool, was designed using traditional techniques in structural block masonry, stone masonry and exposed concrete walls. The second stage, the main house, was designed using prefabrication and assembly systems, such as the use of glued laminated timber (glulam) beams and nailed laminated timber (NLT) slabs. For the external and internal walls, the light steel framing system was adopted.

The landscaping project was very important in this work because, after the implementation of the architectural project, it helped to reconstitute the suppressed native forest in the house surroundings, allowing greater connection between the house and the forest.


By Alfredo Gonzalez

Share on: