AVM House by Horma. Carve a volume to define a void

News Infurma28/05/2021
AVM House by Horma. Carve a volume to define a void
AVM House by Horma. Carve a volume to define a void

A new residential architecture and interior design project carried out by Horma - Estudio de Arquitectura perceived as a set of sculpted volumes. So they explain us the project,

The project starts with an urban singularity that allows locating the house attached to one of its boundaries. The implementation of the proposal already starts from the advantage of knowing the location of its neighbors and is positioned on its opposite side in order to achieve clearer views and more fluid ventilation .

From the street, a barrier crowned with concrete blocks provides privacity to the interior and allows to visualize the traces of the white volumen which shapes the house .

Its footprint on the ground floor is deformed to embrace a patio that gives meaning to each of its rooms. This patio serves as the center and articulator of the activity on the ground floor, in which the day area is located. Besides, it allows to maximize its facade length to extend its relationship with the outside, undoing the traditional limits and thus establishing a new link with it.The successive transitions between interior and exterior allow a fluid movement around the plot and an attractive relationship between the void and the sculpted body, which reduces the scale of the exterior and interior spaces of the house.

The night area is located on the second floor, it aims to create a pleasant route and to take advantage of the most favorable orientations for all the rooms.

The house is perceived as a set of volumes where the white of the facade is mixed with the interior oak wood details, and with de Green of the vegetation.

An apparently irregular approach but balanced in its decisions.

CREDITS

TITLE: CASA AVM
YEAR: 2021
LOCATION: Rocafort, Valencia (Spain)
BUILDING TYPE: Architecture and Interior design
STATUS: Built
SURFACE: 250 sqm

TEAM:
Horma - estudio de arquitectura:
Nacho Juan, Clara Cantó, Jose Iborra, Ana Riera, María Mateo, Belén Iglesias, Bárbara Bruschi

PHOTOGRAPHY: Mariela Apollonio - Fotógrafa de arquitectura

FURNITURE: Cosín

Source: Horma Estudio
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