#
Date
Title
Source
Description
Tags
W4170
24.05.2011
BASIC STRATEGIES - Ana Sucena, Claudia Costa, Pedro Guerra
WWW
BASIC STRATEGIES Our project aims the recognition of how natural, historic, and community cycles work, and uses these aspects to emphasize our design and the technical solutions we have chosen. The house is positioned on the lot in a way that allows e ...

BASIC STRATEGIES

Our project aims the recognition of how natural, historic, and community cycles work, and uses these aspects to emphasize our design and the technical solutions we have chosen. The house is positioned on the lot in a way that allows every resident to have a small front yard, acting as a buffer between the street and the private space, as well as a backyard, which can be used as a vegetable garden or for the expansion of the building. In this project, the whole is made of smaller parts, which can be added or subtracted according to the needs of each of the inhabitants. Each of these parts is connected to a courtyard - “patio”, as the whole is organized around a main one, be it a traditional “patio”, or a covered “patio”. Patios and building geometry are crucial to aspects to achieve efficient natural ventilation and healthy indoor conditions. There are no corridors in this house. As we can find in a large set of examples that use the “patio” as distribution space, in this project, it is the living room, which plays this role. With its perforated walls, the living room works as a covered “patio”, deeply connected to the exterior and interior, at the same time. The living room is at the crossing of the two main axis, that guide the spatial distribution: outside “patio” – inside “patio” – outside “patio”, and entrance – inside “patio” – kitchen, creating an enfilade, or visual sequence, going from the front porch to the backyard. As we can also find in many examples, this house encloses itself regarding the outside, by having openings only towards the patios, as a way to keep the intimacy of the most private spaces.

ECOSISTEM / COMMUNITY / ECONOMY A responsible design is not only about incorporating the latest green technology into the buildings. Environmental sustainability is getting the most of design with what nature has to offer, considering the effects the new buildings will have on the environment. Our design tries to maximize the use of natural resources on site in order to allow the “do it yourself” techniques, minimizing costs and reducing the environmental impact. The house is to be built in compressed earth blocks, commonly know as adobe, as well as all the mortars and plasters are to be earth based. Adobe is one of the oldest building materials in use, and is a good thermal mass holding heat and cool quite well. By having a small number of openings combined with the use of perforated walls, allows the house to be fresher during the summer. During the mild winter, the fact that the building is made of several modules increases the area of the wall exposed to the sun, thus providing natural heating to the house. Additionally, by turning the modules into volumes with different heights, we were able to design a system that allows the re-usage of rainwater for the gardens and backyards.

This combination of traditional construction techniques, with materials that exist on-site, and simple strategies to obtain from nature what is necessary to satisfy basic needs, while trying to produce a minor impact on the environment, is something that our ancestors have done for a long time, and we seem to have put aside for the latest “flavor/technology of the moment”. Yet, these ways are proved worthy by experience, and we are convinced they could be part of the solution for the rapid transformations happening in Luanda nowadays.

BASIC STRATEGIES Our project aims the recognition of how natural, historic, and community cycles work, and uses these aspects to emphasize our design and the technical solutions we have chosen. The house is positioned on the lot in a way that allows e ...

BASIC STRATEGIES

Our project aims the recognition of how natural, historic, and community cycles work, and uses these aspects to emphasize our design and the technical solutions we have chosen. The house is positioned on the lot in a way that allows every resident to have a small front yard, acting as a buffer between the street and the private space, as well as a backyard, which can be used as a vegetable garden or for the expansion of the building. In this project, the whole is made of smaller parts, which can be added or subtracted according to the needs of each of the inhabitants. Each of these parts is connected to a courtyard - “patio”, as the whole is organized around a main one, be it a traditional “patio”, or a covered “patio”. Patios and building geometry are crucial to aspects to achieve efficient natural ventilation and healthy indoor conditions. There are no corridors in this house. As we can find in a large set of examples that use the “patio” as distribution space, in this project, it is the living room, which plays this role. With its perforated walls, the living room works as a covered “patio”, deeply connected to the exterior and interior, at the same time. The living room is at the crossing of the two main axis, that guide the spatial distribution: outside “patio” – inside “patio” – outside “patio”, and entrance – inside “patio” – kitchen, creating an enfilade, or visual sequence, going from the front porch to the backyard. As we can also find in many examples, this house encloses itself regarding the outside, by having openings only towards the patios, as a way to keep the intimacy of the most private spaces.

ECOSISTEM / COMMUNITY / ECONOMY A responsible design is not only about incorporating the latest green technology into the buildings. Environmental sustainability is getting the most of design with what nature has to offer, considering the effects the new buildings will have on the environment. Our design tries to maximize the use of natural resources on site in order to allow the “do it yourself” techniques, minimizing costs and reducing the environmental impact. The house is to be built in compressed earth blocks, commonly know as adobe, as well as all the mortars and plasters are to be earth based. Adobe is one of the oldest building materials in use, and is a good thermal mass holding heat and cool quite well. By having a small number of openings combined with the use of perforated walls, allows the house to be fresher during the summer. During the mild winter, the fact that the building is made of several modules increases the area of the wall exposed to the sun, thus providing natural heating to the house. Additionally, by turning the modules into volumes with different heights, we were able to design a system that allows the re-usage of rainwater for the gardens and backyards.

This combination of traditional construction techniques, with materials that exist on-site, and simple strategies to obtain from nature what is necessary to satisfy basic needs, while trying to produce a minor impact on the environment, is something that our ancestors have done for a long time, and we seem to have put aside for the latest “flavor/technology of the moment”. Yet, these ways are proved worthy by experience, and we are convinced they could be part of the solution for the rapid transformations happening in Luanda nowadays.