Located on the outskirts of the city, this residence explores the tension between mass and transparency, aiming to balance privacy, openness, and proportion.
The design is organized around two intersecting horizontal volumes. The first, white and airy, contains the social areas with generous height and floor-to-ceiling windows that open the interior to the garden. The second, darker and more opaque, houses the private spaces, offering seclusion and intimacy without sacrificing natural light.
The entrance is discreet, guiding visitors into an interior that expands vertically and visually connects both levels. Exposed steel structure and wooden details bring a contemporary, warm, and functional character.
The kitchen—conceived as a glass box—is the domestic heart of the house, in constant dialogue with the landscape.
Toward the back, a leisure space combines rustic and industrial materials, creating a distinct atmosphere that enhances the domestic experience.
This house reflects a search for formal identity through clean lines, precise intersections, and a spatial staging that values light, human scale, and the surrounding landscape.