LoginJoin us
Register
Forgot Password
Add to Collection

House on Lake Rupanco

Lago Rupanco, Chile
51b71db8-91f4-4d78-9d1b-75e06d7b5f76.jpg
1 of 1

The house programme was meant to include a lounge and an office where books, photos and fishing tackle could be kept. The dining room, kitchen and terrace were to have visual continuity, participating at once together and separately in the one space. On the upper floor, the bedrooms are arranged at the far ends of the volumes and connected by a wide corridor that converts this space into an extra area; this gallery extends outwards until it touches the high part of the terrain, making use of the natural slope and generating a secondary, independent entrance.

The outside of the house blends in with the surroundings by borrowing the shapes and textures of the buildings in the area. The structure is of pine, the facades of treated pine and the interior facings of untreated manio and ulmu wood. The exterior has been treated with a black sealer much used in rural buildings in the south of Chile to protect them from the persistent rain. In the course of time the facades will change color and the house will become established and gradually blend in with the other buildings in the area.

The house is organised in two parallel volumes in a woodland clearing, with each element orientated towards its optimum rapport with the landscape: in the upper part towards a wood of myrtle trees and autochthonous bushes; towards the front, the view between the tops of the trees and the lake; and towards the sides, the hermetic, impermeable planes, which from time to time are cut back to allow for the entrance of light.

Go to article
  1. Archdaily
vanessafralves, March 5th, 2017
Go to article