State
Built
Situation:
c/ Bajeles 14. Seville
Customer:
Guadalupe González Fernández
Contractor:
Antequera Molina Brothers
Constructed area:
185 m
2
Budget:
148,000€
Project - Work
2000-2003
Contest
Architect
Architects
Ignacio Laguillo, Harald Schönegger | Laguillo-Schönegger Architects
Architecture
Co-author Project
Project Co-authors
Associate Architect
Associate Architects
Collaborating Architect:
Local Architects
Technical Architecture:
Manuel Delgado Martín
Equipment:
Collaborator
Collaborators
Structure:
Facilities:
Landscaping:
Furniture
Model
Photograph:
Fernando Alda
Fernando Alda
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Los Humeros is one of the oldest suburbs of the old town, and Bajeles Street, one of the most important, originally located just outside the wall. Created from a network of houses of a popular and modest tone, it was composed of a hamlet that was coming to our times very deteriorated.
In a state of ruin and with a typological protection that forced to preserve the first bay, the destination of the new house was preserved as residential, although the operation of the same would respond to very different needs to those that served originally. Exploring to the maximum the spatial and organizational possibilities of the house were the most important premises for the new occupant of the house.
After preserving the spatial and constructive aspects of the first bay, the vertical communication core would be located behind this first load-bearing wall, concentrating the only void of the house at the end of the grounds, allowing for the largest possible surface area and the shortest possible route between rooms.
The house would develop in the first two floors the uses of greater activity during the day, reserving the last level for rest spaces and access to the roof. Within this organization, the greatest prominence was given to the most public floor of access from the street, where the ground plane is compressed as it moves inward, dominating the entire dimension of the plot. In this way, the courtyard acquires a meaning somewhat different from that considered in traditional Sevillian courtyard houses, becoming a patio-garden that is a mere extension of its more public domestic space.










