![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Exterior Photography](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5008/fff9/28ba/0d27/a700/11bb/medium_jpg/stringio.jpg?1414381379)
-
Architects: Pezo von Ellrichshausen
- Area: 500 m²
-
Photographs:Cristobal Palma / Estudio Palma
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Interior Photography](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5009/0011/28ba/0d27/a700/11c1/medium_jpg/stringio.jpg?1414381382)
Text description provided by the architects. We decided to test the archetypical features of the suburban house. This exercise was never as explicit as the conciliation required by the formalities of the case: a suburban dwelling in a neighborhood of detached houses. As the rest of the residences, this was a big house in a plot too small for such a size; a house that had to look like one (for the sake of the neighbors mental peace); a house made of “material” (a local expression referring to the unquestioned solidity of concrete constructions) that would never age (for the peace of mind of the owners).
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Exterior Photography, Windows, Brick, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5008/fff5/28ba/0d27/a700/11ba/newsletter/stringio.jpg?1414381390)
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Image 20 of 33](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5009/002f/28ba/0d27/a700/11c9/medium_jpg/stringio.jpg?1414381423)
In an almost automatic move we proposed a heavy and clumsy rectangular prism that echoed the cornered site tucked away at the end of the street; we projected an extension of the plot in two elevated dry patios; we planned a piece that unified the silhouette of four pitched roofs, not too different from the naïve outlines of a child’s drawing; we built a secondary pigmented concrete wall that was repaired several times during its crafted fabrication and that was build in layers so that each new one spilled itself over the previous one.
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Exterior Photography, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5008/ffed/28ba/0d27/a700/11b8/newsletter/stringio.jpg?1414381374)
“It’s the weeping house” a carpenter said while he varnished the boards of the furniture “perhaps the only way to avoid aging is to be born old”. Of the four infantile silhouettes only the one closest to the street does not have a base. It is a transversal block suspended over the little remaining air offered by the neighborhood’s square.
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5008/ffe5/28ba/0d27/a700/11b6/newsletter/stringio.jpg?1414381388)
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Image 18 of 33](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5009/0028/28ba/0d27/a700/11c7/newsletter/stringio.jpg?1414381417)
When Colomina talks about Graham’s inbuilt project she teaches us that “since each house in the urbanization faces an almost identical one across the street, its window becomes another identification screen, a kind of mirror”. In this case, the mirror occupies a place unreachable to the direct eye. It is a disproportioned showcase that allows intruders to enter only when they look from a distance.
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Image 14 of 33](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5009/0008/28ba/0d27/a700/11bf/newsletter/stringio.jpg?1414381401)
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Image 23 of 33](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5009/003b/28ba/0d27/a700/11cc/medium_jpg/stringio.jpg?1414381432)
![Pael House / Pezo von Ellrichshausen - Exterior Photography, Windows, Brick, Facade](https://images.adsttc.com/media/images/5009/001d/28ba/0d27/a700/11c4/newsletter/stringio.jpg?1414381409)