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SV House in Sobrado, Portugal, by Spaceworkers

Project name:
SV House
Architecture firm:
Spaceworkers
Location:
Sobrado, Portugal
Photography:
Fernando Guerra | FG+SG
Principal architect:
Henrique Marques and Rui Dinis
Design team:
João Ortigão, Marco Santos, Tiago Maciel
Collaborators:
Financial director: Carla Duarte - cfo
Interior design:
Olive Grey
Built area:
378 m²
Site area:
Design year:
2015
Completion year:
2022
Civil engineer:
CTJX
Structural engineer:
CTJX
Environmental & MEP:
Landscape:
Lighting:
Supervision:
Visualization:
Tools used:
Construction:
Material:
Concrete, glass
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Private
Status:
Built
Typology:
Residential › House

Spaceworkers: The SV house is located in a rural context surrounded by the typical traditional houses with sloped roofs, small windows, and wrapped by anonymous architecture. The plot for the house is where once was the owner grandparents house, it’s small in scale but huge in stories and memories for the whole family. Since the beginning we knew that we wanted to create something disruptive in this environment, something that clearly stands out from the crowd but at the same time was quite and silence for the street, offers privacy to his inhabitants and gave hers a new perspective of the chaotic surroundings.

The house materialises it self in a concrete block where de openings for the different spaces go beyond the mere need for ventilation and natural lighting. From the outside, they are an important element in the composition of the elevations and in the perception of the occupation of the house that they reveal, but without revealing too much. Internally, these openings focus on framing pieces of the distant landscape, or even the sky, avoiding the close surroundings punctuated by houses.

Each space has a critical look at a particular point in the landscape, allowing users different views of the same landscape depending on the position and size of the window they are looking at. On the outside, the use of exposed concrete emphasises the idea of solidity that we wanted to express in contrast to the light wood and white walls of the interior that express lightness. It is also in this dichotomy that the house relates to its neighbours and with those who inhabit it and walk through its spaces.


By Liliana Alvarez

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