Santa Anita Golf Club, Tlajomulco, Jalisco, Mexico
Agraz Arquitectos
Post By:Kitticoon Poopong
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
Never has a name been more appropriate. The Mountain explains the implicit challenge in this project: a piece of land with a highly accentuated slope that obliges full respect.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
Being the last terrain of the Santa Anita suburb in both, lateral and back limits, it is exempted of any vicinity whatsoever, other than that of the La Primavera forest at its highest peak. Nevertheless it is somehow whimsical because even though it is generous in matters of space area, its street front is barely 12 meters wide. Therefore this condition commands the entire program.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
Parking and pedestrian walk entries are thus placed there, and knowing beforehand this is the way the project is going to develop, the rest is about stealing spaces from the mountain according to the client’s will and the site inspiration.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
The house sets into the slope making its topography inhabitable and this is how the project upholds in four levels: the first one for the automobiles, the next one for social areas (kitchen, living and dinning rooms), third one for main bedroom next to family room, and last, a fourth one destined for boy and girl bedrooms which have the most privileged views due to their location in the highest peak of the terrain.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
The four platform program required a connecting element, which is why a never ending stairway picks up each one of the floors, and in parallel, a diagonal elevator gives easiness to tough distances.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
Due to the program features, the house hosts in its center one of the family’s most precious places: the wine cellar. Perfectly set within the mountain, it fulfills all the requirements to be so: controlled temperature, humidity and lighting, whereas it allows place for a wine bar and the capacity to add up to other public areas such as dinning and living room by a retractile door piece.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
With this terrace connotation that moderates the land slope, the inserted to the mountain house turns also into a Santa Anita landscape belvedere, where looking outside in is watching it go into mimesis with the topography. Whereas seeing inside out, is enjoying this wonderful view as time, light, Sun and vegetation transform throughout each season of the year.
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
Photo © Courtesy of Mito Covarrubias |
|
underground floor plan--drawing © Courtesy of Agraz Arquitectos |
|
ground floor plan--drawing © Courtesy of Agraz Arquitectos |
|
1st floor plan--drawing © Courtesy of Agraz Arquitectos |
|
2nd floor plan--drawing © Courtesy of Agraz Arquitectos |
|
section AA'--drawing © Courtesy of Agraz Arquitectos |
Project Data
Project name: Mountain House
Location: Santa Anita Golf Club, Tlajomulco, Jalisco, Mexico
Program: Single family house
Site Area: 980 m2
Construction Area: 640 m2
Completion Year: 2009
Award:
- Name: VI Architectural Biennal of Guadalajara; Date: September 2009; Description: Silver medal by the National Academy of Architecture, Guadalajara Chapter; Reason: Architectural Quality of the Project.
The people
Client / Owner: Private
Photographs: © Mito Covarrubias
Note>>Location in this map, indicate city/country but not exact address.