Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior PhotographyChestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior PhotographyChestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Beam, HandrailChestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, ForestChestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - More Images+ 37

Vale Flor, Portugal
  • Author: João Mendes Ribeiro
  • Collaboration: Ana Maria Feijão (coord. projecto), João Fôja (coord. obra), Catarina Fortuna, Dominika Van Eenbergen, Filipe Catarino, Joana Brandão, José Nogueira, Pedro Teixeira
  • Client: Miguel Sobral e Hélder Silva
  • Foundations And Structures: Armando Vale (Raul Serafim & Associados)
  • Hydraulic Engineer: Maria Alexandra Vicente (Raul Serafim & Associados)
  • Electrical Engineer: Raul Serafim (Raul Serafim & Associados)
  • Mechanical Enginner: Bruno Henriques (Raul Serafim & Associados)
  • Fire Protection: Maria da Luz Santiago (Raul Serafim & Associados)
  • Thermal Engineer: Bruno Henriques (Raul Serafim & Associados)
  • Contractor: Civifran Construções, Lda
  • Project Year: 2015 a 2017
  • Construction Year: 2018 a 2020
  • Site Area: 41140 m2
  • City: Vale Flor
  • Country: Portugal
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Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Forest
© José Campos

Text description provided by the architects. Chestnut house is located in Valeflor, in the north of Portugal, a rural area densely occupied by chestnut and oak trees, which extend on a slope facing East-South, with the Serra da Marofa as background.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography
© José Campos

The first visit to the site revealed a large secular chestnut tree that became the motto for the development of the house project. Under this chestnut tree, invoking the concept of the genius loci, a “shelter” house was designed: the Chestnut House.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Forest
© José Campos
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Windows, Forest
© José Campos
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Image 37 of 42
Sketch 01
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography
© José Campos

The intervention sought to be as less intrusive as possible, keeping the original character of the land practically untouched and without affecting the shelter tree, around which the house is implanted, molding itself to its
imposing morphology and merging with the landscape.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Chair, Windows
© José Campos
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Image 31 of 42
Ground floor plan and elevation
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Chair
© José Campos

The construction is made of a light and over-elevated structure, whose volumetry and materiality relate to the terrain in the most harmonious way possible, without affecting the chestnut roots. The design of the building and the choice of materials comply with sustainability principles, energy and low carbon solutions that tend to be sustainable in order to minimize the environmental impact of the construction.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Bedroom
© José Campos
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Image 35 of 42
Axo - Structure
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Bedroom, Beam
© José Campos

All the structure is in certified wood, covered with oriented strand board (OSB) and cork panels, with thermal and acoustic characteristics. In the exterior, both facades, roof and deck are covered with modified wood, painted black. This material respects the natural properties of wood and guarantees its durability and dimensional stability. The walls and ceiling, as well as the furniture, are made of birch plywood, which gives a warm and welcoming atmosphere to the interior of the house.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Beam, Handrail
© José Campos

The perfect geometry of two associated cubes (4.1 meters edge) is broken and tensioned by the tree trunk and its branches, opening the building towards the tree canopy, which amplifies the presence of the landscape.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography
© José Campos

On the elevations there are small and large openings that relate with the sundial or with the landscape. Large openings connect the interior space with nature, while small openings, concealed by the outer covering of darkened modified wood, guarantee privacy in internal spaces.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography
© José Campos
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Facade
© José Campos

In a critical reflection on Living, the aim was to transform the minimum space into comfort and sustainability. The interior organization of the house is designed in function of minimum space, that allows to minimize the external volumetry and to guarantee a functional and comfortable use of the internal spaces. The house accommodates, in a single space, the convenience and kitchen areas, the living area and the sleeping space, with the possibility of placing an extra bed on a mezzanine.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Windows
© José Campos

The living area is deeply connected with the outer area through a large window that extends the interior space outside and onto the wooden deck platform, enhancing a dilution of the interior / exterior border and frankly allowing outdoor living. There is no living room, but there is a mediation space between the interior and the exterior, because the living room is under the chestnut canopy.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Interior Photography, Table, Windows, Chair, Beam
© José Campos

The chestnut house reveals, throughout the year, the changes of the season and the weather - it is a barometer object, that subjects to the mutations of nature, in its textures and colors, which is, simultaneously, an extension of nature and of our body. It is the changing game of nature that determines the life of the inhabitant.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Forest
© José Campos
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Image 34 of 42
Axo
Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Forest
© José Campos

Unlike the idyllic image of the landscape as a fixed frame of time, the design of this house takes into account the unstable and the unpredictable, seeking to express an architecture in close symbiosis with the surrounding
landscape.

Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows
© José Campos

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Cite: "Chestnut House / João Mendes Ribeiro" [Casa no Castanheiro / João Mendes Ribeiro] 09 Jan 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/994612/chestnut-house-joao-mendes-ribeiro> ISSN 0719-8884

© José Campos

栗木小屋,自然共生 / João Mendes Ribeiro

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