Arbolada House was born from the desire to embrace a tree without touching it. Set on a lush site with consolidated vegetation, the house unfolds as a composition of volumes connected by light, shade, and transparency—always responding to the presence and orientation of the existing trees.
Its architectural language is sober yet expressive, with cantilevered roofs that protect from the sun and create transitional patios where interior and exterior dissolve. The layout is built around a central void that frames the landscape, brings in natural light, and ensures consistent cross ventilation.
Materiality plays a key role: steel, concrete, wood, and glass are crafted with care and assembled under principles of low maintenance, energy efficiency, and passive climate performance. Every element—from the placement of the windows to the treatment of the roof—follows a logic of environmental and spatial harmony.
Casa Arbolada is not an object among trees.
It is an architectural pause between their branches.