BC House
Monterrey, Mexico
2009

Our project is in a privileged topographic situation, due to its visual condition of greater height in relation to the surrounding neighbors. This allows the house to enjoy excellent vistas towards the National Park of Chipinque in the south, as well as towards the entire east, which is dominated in the horizon by the “Cerro de la Silla”, an emblematic…

Locación
Monterrey, Mexico
Categoría
Residential Interiors
Año
2009
Info +

Our project is in a privileged topographic situation, due to its visual condition of greater height in relation to the surrounding neighbors. This allows the house to enjoy excellent vistas towards the National Park of Chipinque in the south, as well as towards the entire east, which is dominated in the horizon by the “Cerro de la Silla”, an emblematic hill in the boundaries of the city of Monterrey.

The proposed access to the site is located in the North side of it, ascending through a long slope that leads you to the highest level, where the floor plan is located.

With simple, pure geometric volumes, but rather challenging structural solutions, our project intends to evoke an image of lightness within a language of heavy and massive volumes.

Although color does not have yet an important presence in our work, this project takes an important step forward into the exploration of new materials, as it is the black granite and the white exposed concrete, in addition to the personality that the great amount of exposed steel elements gives to the building.

Finally, it is important to mention that beyond its bio-climatic function, the implementation of green roofs as a way to integrate the landscape, trying to conserve the natural surroundings of the zone, always dominated by the presence of the splendid Sierra Madre mountain range.

 

Sustainability

The house was conceived like a “Sustainable House” since the beginning, so it has a study on energetic efficiency, which analyzes the sun trajectory and the prevailing winds in diverse seasons of the year.

As a result of these studies, the house has diverse systems of isolation, like its double walls with Polyisocyanurate, an ecological insulator; double windows with low emissivity (Low-E) glass; systems of pluvial water harvesting and gray water treatment for irrigation, solar paddles for pool heating and garden illumination, solar water heaters, hydronic heating systems to reduce the power consumption, south oriented skylights, as well as a landscape project with native vegetation.

Extension
1,450 M2
Architect
Gilberto L. Rodríguez
Project Team
Felipe Dorado
Tomas Güereña
Joaquin Jenis
Oscar O’Farrill
Diana Guerra
Lorena Sampedro
Enrique Salas
Pamela Díaz de León
Rafael Návar
Emmanuel Soto
Photography
Jorge Taboada
Awards
- (2011) Calli First Prize, Category: Single Family Housing, XVI Architecture Biennal of the State of Nuevo Leon
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BC House

Monterrey, Mexico
2009
Extension

1,450 M2

Architect

Gilberto L. Rodríguez

Project Team

Felipe Dorado
Tomas Güereña
Joaquin Jenis
Oscar O’Farrill
Diana Guerra
Lorena Sampedro
Enrique Salas
Pamela Díaz de León
Rafael Návar
Emmanuel Soto

Photography

Jorge Taboada

Awards

- (2011) Calli First Prize, Category: Single Family Housing, XVI Architecture Biennal of the State of Nuevo Leon

Our project is in a privileged topographic situation, due to its visual condition of greater height in relation to the surrounding neighbors. This allows the house to enjoy excellent vistas towards the National Park of Chipinque in the south, as well as towards the entire east, which is dominated in the horizon by the “Cerro de la Silla”, an emblematic hill in the boundaries of the city of Monterrey.

The proposed access to the site is located in the North side of it, ascending through a long slope that leads you to the highest level, where the floor plan is located.

With simple, pure geometric volumes, but rather challenging structural solutions, our project intends to evoke an image of lightness within a language of heavy and massive volumes.

Although color does not have yet an important presence in our work, this project takes an important step forward into the exploration of new materials, as it is the black granite and the white exposed concrete, in addition to the personality that the great amount of exposed steel elements gives to the building.

Finally, it is important to mention that beyond its bio-climatic function, the implementation of green roofs as a way to integrate the landscape, trying to conserve the natural surroundings of the zone, always dominated by the presence of the splendid Sierra Madre mountain range.

 

Sustainability

The house was conceived like a “Sustainable House” since the beginning, so it has a study on energetic efficiency, which analyzes the sun trajectory and the prevailing winds in diverse seasons of the year.

As a result of these studies, the house has diverse systems of isolation, like its double walls with Polyisocyanurate, an ecological insulator; double windows with low emissivity (Low-E) glass; systems of pluvial water harvesting and gray water treatment for irrigation, solar paddles for pool heating and garden illumination, solar water heaters, hydronic heating systems to reduce the power consumption, south oriented skylights, as well as a landscape project with native vegetation.

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