Auxiliary
pavilion serving an existing single family house and design of the garden that
surrounds and covers the new proposed building. The plot has a slope between
the upper road and the lower level of the south-east limit. The proposed
program inside the pavilion counts with a kitchen, a dining-room, a cellar, a
living-room and a studio/bedroom area with a full-equipped bathroom. The garden
design includes a stone stairway that connects the two different levels of the
project: the garden upstairs and the new entrance downstairs. The pre-cast
concrete hollow core slabs leave a space between them, allowing light inside
the pavilion through three skylights along the whole length of the plan. This
solution organizes the garden on the roof, making clearly visible the four
different linear planters, each of them with a different colour dominant
flower. The last row is a pool that collects rain-water and has aquatic
vegetation that biologically filters the recycled water. The purified water is
brought to the natural pool on the lower level through small water-falls guided
by sloped corten sheets. This system
to drive the water is similar to the one used in the traditional houses from
the Balearic Islands to take the water from the roof to the tanks through a
zigzag on the façade made of tiles. On the pavilion’s roof a dry stone wall is
built with limestone from the area. Behind this wall, a planter contains a
tamarisk tree meant to bring shade on the small paved area of the rooftop. As
explained before, the rest of the roof is covered with vegetation of different
colours, in order to enhance the visual continuity of the garden with the
Mediterranean Sea as a background.