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PH Helguera, Buenos Aires, Argentina by OADD arquitectos

Project name:
PH Helguera
Architecture firm:
OADD arquitectos
Location:
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Photography:
Bruto Studio
Principal architect:
Andrés Barone, Jorge Baez Moore, Fabricio Contreras Ansbergs
Design team:
Andrés Barone, Jorge Baez Moore, Fabricio Contreras Ansbergs. Project management:Fabricio Contreras Ansbergs
Collaborators:
Matías Novak, José Cano
Interior design:
OADD arquitectos
Built area:
100 m²
Site area:
60 m²
Design year:
2022
Completion year:
2023
Civil engineer:
Structural engineer:
Darío Márquez
Environmental & MEP:
Landscape:
OADD arquitectos
Lighting:
OADD arquitectos
Supervision:
Andrés Barone
Visualization:
Fabrik Visual Studio
Tools used:
AutoCAD, Autodesk 3ds Max, SketchUp, Excel
Construction:
JC Construcciones
Material:
Concrete, Brick, Steel
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Private
Status:
Completed
Typology:
Residential › House

OADD arquitectos: The challenge was to completely transform the old "ph", which functioned as a carpentry shop. Modify the original structure (dark rooms) with spaces full of light that open onto a large void, a longitudinal patio with a contemporary and welcoming imprint.

In this sense, the Helguera "ph" is an architectural signifier of change: a home that has evolved into a radical comprehensive proposal. The idea of a patio that articulates the social floor (living room, kitchen) with the grill, allows for a fluid development of both the daily and domestic activities of the home and broader social gatherings. This leads to separating the bedrooms on the ground floor, on a higher plane to improve lighting and privacy conditions. As a programmatic corollary, a large terrace is created that functions as a catalyst for outdoor activities.

The language of the ph refers to the old brick walls that composed it, generating a forceful aesthetic constructive solution and a material reality that is shown in its most genuine stereotomic quality. The simple condition of stacking masonry helped create a rough envelope of pregnant color, releasing the interior to a smooth white color. We call this design condition the “coconut paradigm” and it operates in a constant dialectic of sensory contrasts and temporal differences. In this way, we integrate preexistence as the germ of the new, reinterpretation and rereading as an indispensable design tool.


By Alfredo Gonzalez

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