A House That Becomes a Surprise
A solid, white, and hermetic volume to the exterior that, once opened, reveals a completely opposite world within.
Set on a compact 6 × 15 meter lot, this 73 m² dwelling explores the relationship between interior and exterior through a clear strategy: subtracting space to inhabit better. The project is organized around a central courtyard that articulates all spaces, allowing natural light, cross ventilation, and vegetation to become the true protagonists of the domestic experience.
Toward the street, the house presents itself as a sober and monolithic façade: an almost abstract white plane where a discreet opening subtly suggests the entrance. This restrained gesture intensifies the contrast with the richness of the interior, creating a deliberate transition between public and private realms.
Upon entering, the house unfolds as a continuous sequence of spaces visually and physically connected to the courtyard. The exposed wooden beam structure not only resolves the constructive system but also introduces warmth, rhythm, and scale to the whole. The material palette is expressed in an honest and coherent way: natural wood, light-toned walls, and lightweight metal elements.
The social area—living room, dining room, and kitchen—is conceived as a single fluid space, opening onto the interior garden through sliding glass doors that blur the boundary between inside and outside. Vegetation is integrated as an essential component of the architecture, accompanying daily life while contributing to microclimate regulation.
The courtyard is not merely a compositional device, but the true heart of the project: an intermediate space that brings light and air into the home while visually expanding it, generating a sense of spaciousness that transcends its limited footprint.
Furniture and details reinforce the project’s intent: simple lines, neutral tones, and carefully selected pieces that engage in dialogue with the architecture without competing with it.
Overall, the house proposes an intimate, efficient, and luminous way of living, where every square meter is optimized and architecture is shaped through the relationship between void, light, and nature.