03JUL 2012
© MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN
COBOGÓ HOUSE / MARZIO KOGAN
Posted in Architecture - Houses by FORMAKERS
The light of the abundant tropical Sun falls on the white volume of the top floor of the house, penetrating the holes of the hollowed elements and covering the floor of the interior space.© MARZIO KOGAN
Thus, the design of spatialized lace is formed from the shadows and solar rays.© MARZIO KOGAN
The effect is multiplied throughout the ambient, making a construction from the light itself.
Throughout the days, throughout the months, the hollowed-out elements take on different forms with the incidence of the sun; at night, this effect once again is transformed; in a continuous process of metamorphosis, its form changes from the light.© MARZIO KOGAN
The soft volumetric geometry of the hollowed-out elements comprising the walls is a complex construction, made with infinite curved lines.© MARZIO KOGAN
The modular element, a work of art, was designed by the Austrian-American Erwin Hauer who, since 1950, has conceived and made sculptures for architectural space.© MARZIO KOGAN
His minimalist elements dialogue with the architecture and remind us of some traces of Brazilian modern architecture.© MARZIO KOGAN
The curved lines, designed with perfection nod to the architecture of Brasilia by Niemeyer; furthermore, the concrete modules descend from the Cobogós – which lends its name to the house – created in Recife and diffused by Lucio Costa in delicate references to colonial architecture.
The Cobogó House is a modern house in which the art of Erwin Hauer can be used naturally, as a part of the entire architecture.© MARZIO KOGAN
In the play of mounting pure volumes, made of white spackling paste, concrete and wood; lies, together with the terrace garden, the volume constructed from the hollowed elements by Erwin Hauer.© MARZIO KOGAN
Inside this space, there is a multiple-use living room and a small spa.© MARZIO KOGAN
On the ground floor the living room connects entirely with the garden, where there is a small artificial lake.© MARZIO KOGAN
Fish and plants help maintain the biological balance of the pool without the use of chemical products that assail the environment. This environmental thought permeated the entire project which incorporated principles of sustainability established by rigid standards, similar to certifications.© MARZIO KOGAN
In the house, there is a great concern to use recycling apparatus and reduce water consumption; rationalize and organize the construction to minimize the impacts; use devices for energy efficiency and optimization; install solar heating plaques; besides using only certified, recycled or ecologically correct material.© MARZIO KOGAN
The use of this knowledge together with architecture that respects the local climate resulted in a house having excellent inner comfort.© MARZIO KOGAN
In both the back living room – which on one side opens to a large front garden and on the other to a patio of trees – and the bedrooms, the inner ambients are shaded by wooden mashrabiyas that make possible good ventilation with internal shading.© MARZIO KOGAN
The panels can open entirely as can the floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors, diluting, in this way, the transition between internal and external space.
On the last floor, the work of art thought of as architectural space is the symbol of the house which, just as the enormous Jabuticabeira of the garden, constructs a singular space and a reflexive atmosphere that invokes a brief contemplative silence.© MARZIO KOGAN
.© MARZIO KOGAN
© MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN © MARZIO KOGAN
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