Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, FacadeOcampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Windows, FacadeOcampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography, Facade, WindowsOcampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography, Facade, Beam, HandrailOcampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - More Images+ 30

Ituzaingó, Argentina
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1968
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2021
  • Photographs
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Bará, D'accord, Descar SRL , Domec, FV, Grun Vivero Orgánico, Iwin , Johson, Oblack , Roca Capea , Runic
  • Lead Architect: Diorella A. Fortunati
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Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade
© Federico Kulekdjian

Text description provided by the architects. In a corner of Ituzaingó, in the west zone of the Buenos Aires suburbs, is the residential building of Ocampo. Its environment currently displays various multi-family housing projects under construction, responding to the new urban planning code that contemplates greater densification for the area. However, one premise was to generate a project that is respectful of its environment, understanding that its modification will take time and, meanwhile, the building will have to coexist with low-rise neighbors and houses with gardens.

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Windows, Facade, Balcony
© Federico Kulekdjian
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Image 26 of 35
View
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Facade
© Federico Kulekdjian

With its ground level and five floors, we proposed a building that above all makes use of the corner, a building that rotates and makes use of its four orientations and therefore has any variation of daylight from its openings. All the facades enjoy the movement of different planes of light and shadow projections because, like the city, we believe that the architectural work must adapt to its immediate environment. Using the expansions as a morphological tool, an alternating system creates different typologies on each floor, the heterogeneity being not only formal but also programmatic, enabling different ways of inhabiting.

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows, Balcony
© Federico Kulekdjian
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Image 28 of 35
Section
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows
© Federico Kulekdjian

The greatest contribution in a city where everything is private, where the stranger feels suspicious, was to cede the obligatory withdrawals of the ground floor to public use and provide it with new vegetation, support for city life to develop in it: a changing and low-maintenance flooring in relation to the gastronomic venues, a pond, a continuous concrete bench, flowerpots, party walls stripped of bars and covered with vines, semi-covered with concrete beams, and drinking fountains. A total area of 210 m2 is now public.

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Windows, Door, Facade
© Federico Kulekdjian
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Image 32 of 35
Ground Floor
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography, Windows, Facade, Beam
© Federico Kulekdjian

Functionally, the building shows three large typologies from the second to the sixth floor with generous areas of exterior expansions without categorizing them by the total number of rooms in the unit or their real estate value. A major challenge for us was to ensure that each apartment has, at least in a sensory sense, the independence of a house.

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography
© Federico Kulekdjian
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Image 33 of 35
Floor Plan
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Exterior Photography, Windows, Garden
© Federico Kulekdjian

Part of the project reflects the intention to generate isolated housing units, with fewer possibilities of hearing disturbing noises between apartments, as well as crossed views. That is why most of the units do not share dividing walls, they are separated by voids, by the circulatory system and, in a third and eventual case, by the humid nuclei. We named the units after the “Trees of Buenos Aires” by the Argentine writer Silvina Ocampo and we linked them through stairs and semi-covered bridges.

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography, Facade, Handrail
© Federico Kulekdjian
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Image 31 of 35
Details
Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography, Concrete
© Federico Kulekdjian

The building is, on an urban scale, a perforated mass with three large voids. These house vegetation and circulation while providing cross ventilation. We focus on noble materials that allow the passage of time and change in appearance without losing structural capacity, just as our skin ages over the years. Each of our intentions became a space, a facade, a technique, a way of relating to the city, a diffuse limit, a detail.

Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st - Interior Photography, Windows, Beam
© Federico Kulekdjian

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Project location

Address:Camacuá 293, Ituzaingó, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Ocampo Building / Estudio Morton 51st" [Edificio Ocampo / Estudio Morton 51st] 13 Feb 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/996356/ocampo-building-estudio-morton-51st> ISSN 0719-8884

© Federico Kulekdjian

单间即独栋,奥坎波住宅 / Estudio Morton 51st

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