Set on a sloped site facing a public park, Nature takes the reddish earth — characteristic of the local soil — as both physical ground and symbolic origin for the architecture. Present in the intense color of the terrain and in the collective memory of the place, this material gives rise to the project’s central gesture: a grounded base supports a light, staggered volume that follows the natural topography and opens itself to the landscape. The building is organized in two distinct layers — a firm plinth that activates the street, and an airy, cantilevered massing in which architecture and landscape are interwoven through a sequence of solids and voids.
The project’s relationship with the urban context begins at the ground plane. The base houses double-height commercial spaces and incorporates a pedestrian passage that threads between volumes, creating a sense of permeability and a welcoming atmosphere. This initial gesture establishes the logic of the design: the architecture unfolds from the terrain, articulating private terraces facing the park and stacking residential blocks above. The units are arranged to prioritize views, with living areas positioned at the corners and corner-glazed openings that draw the landscape inward. A continuous planter wraps the building’s perimeter, bringing vegetation into the units and creating a sensory extension of the surrounding nature.
The project’s material palette reinforces this architectural strategy. The base is clad in terracotta-toned ceramic tiles, establishing visual continuity with the outdoor paving and the vehicular entrances, which use permeable concrete of the same color and geometry. In contrast, the upper volume is defined by lightness — slabs, infill walls, window frames, and metalwork are rendered in white, with light granite used in common areas and protective elements. Dark wood panels frame visual transitions and circulation paths, cladding commercial volumes, the vertical core, and rooftop spaces. The same finish appears in technical and service areas, lending material unity. At specific points, where the massing is interrupted to open views, the exposed concrete structure is left visible as part of the architectural expression.
Circulation areas were conceived as spaces for pause and presence, not just movement. Double- and triple-height atriums introduce natural light and frame moments of contact with vegetation. The vertical circulation core, clad in wood slats, anchors the composition and aids spatial orientation. At the rooftop, a compact volume houses the shared amenities — a party room, kids’ space, and gym — all connected by a panoramic terrace with a pool and firepit, offering spaces for leisure, gathering, and contemplation.
The project comprises 27 apartments across four floors, with two- and three-bedroom typologies. Units facing the park feature terraces with unobstructed views, while those on the mezzanine include private gardens that evoke the atmosphere of a backyard. Social areas were designed with expansive openings and corner windows to maximize daylight, natural ventilation, and visual transparency. Planters along the entire façade act as a living frame, reinforcing the ongoing dialogue between architecture, landscape, and everyday life.
By articulating topography, vegetation, and urban rhythm through a single architectural logic, Nature becomes more than a building placed within the city — it is a contextual response, returned to the territory as thoughtful architecture.