El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Exterior PhotographyEl Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Table, CountertopEl Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Bedroom, BedEl Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Exterior PhotographyEl Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - More Images+ 24

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  144
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Tamara Uribe
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Sika, American Standard, Carpintería Linares, Cemex, Comex, Mosaicos La Peninsular, Tecnolite, URREA, Vitrum
  • Lead Architect: Víctor Alejandro Cruz Domínguez, Iván Atahualpa Hernández Salazar, Luís Armando Estrada Aguilar
  • Construction: Juan Diaz Cab, Luis Esteban Alonso Carrillo
  • Structure: Juan Diaz Cab
  • Collaborators: Silvia Cuitún Coronado, Ana Karen Domínguez Peniche, Zahid Quintal Polanco
  • City: Mérida
  • Country: Mexico
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El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Exterior Photography
© Tamara Uribe

Text description provided by the architects. The concept and name of the project El Nido stands for nest and comes from the Latin word nidus. The term refers to the shelter that birds build with branches, straws and other elements. Just as they make their nests, the goal of this house was to achieve a refuge to be inhabited and enjoyed without major complications, creating a project of great simplicity yet of great spatial richness by using a minimal and simple palette of materials.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Exterior Photography
© Tamara Uribe

Casa El Nido is built on a lot of 4.70 x 26.00 meters as a response to the needs of the users to have a space where experiences and ideas are generated, weaving together a pre-existing building with a completely new one, creating a suture with an empty space, giving the new building the prominence as a great protective envelope for the inhabitants.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Table, Chair, Beam
© Tamara Uribe

The existing part acts as an entry point to the house. Its original essence is preserved with original clay floors, stuccoed and painted walls, leaving an exposed vestige of the stone masonry walls and stuccoed ceilings with the exposed metal structure. This building houses an inner room and directs the user towards the transition point and towards the new building.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Table, Chair, Countertop
© Tamara Uribe
El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Image 24 of 29
Floor Plan Ground Floor
El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Image 27 of 29
Section

The suture point between both buildings is an open space that allows observing and dimensioning the contemporary element completely finished in burnished grey cement and foldable glass walls. This transitional space houses a small pool and an open courtyard surrounded by a garden consisting mainly of stone elements both as walls and floors.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Windows, Chair
© Tamara Uribe

The large volume houses the double-height dining room, the kitchen area and one bedroom with a bathroom and an interior garden on the ground floor and a study and another bedroom with a full bathroom on the upper floor, with the logic of creating the public areas in the front part of the house and the private ones at the rear.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Bedroom, Bed
© Tamara Uribe
El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Sofa, Table, Chair
© Tamara Uribe

We take the basic elements of the space, walls, slabs and floors, and generate two adjoining load-bearing walls and a slab supported on them creating a large volume that can accommodate two floors thanks to the use of a mezzanine. The generated volume is closed at its ends following the need to create interior spaces that host the different activities of daily life.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Exterior Photography
© Tamara Uribe

The walls and ceilings are covered with grey burnished cement, leaving the ground floor with white burnished and polished cement, while a bamboo floor covering was used upstairs. The vertical circulation cube separates the public area from the private and gives access to the mezzanine level and to the roof terrace where an area for rest and observation of the city is created in the shade of a tree.

El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Lighting, Chair
© Tamara Uribe

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Cite: "El Nido House / Taller Estilo Arquitectura" [Casa el nido / Taller Estilo Arquitectura] 27 Apr 2021. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/960659/el-nido-house-taller-estilo-arquitectura> ISSN 0719-8884

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