aliança house / atelier
Built
Porto, Portugal, 2021-2024
plot size: 491sqm
gross built area: 310sqm
photo credits: attilio fiumarella
The project brings a sense of unity and coherence to the revised structure, looking for a building that will be respectful of its neighbors while maintaining its own specificity
Porto, 2021
as found
We found an extremely promising plot with a generous backyard and the rather odd remnants of a building renovation gone awry
Situation Plan: as found
Situation Plan: proposal
Cross Section: proposal
as built
Judicious demolitions will remove part of the recently juxtaposed, excessive, volume. The preexisting stone walls are kept, as is most of the newly added concrete structure. The challenge is to incorporate all these disparaged elements in what will hopefully read as a coherent building.
The project looks for seamless integration of domestic life / work dynamics under one common roof, creating specific yet complementary and independent spaces
A generous living area in the first floor overlooks the garden, acting as a hinge between working areas, below, and bedrooms, above
The House / Atelier is a residential / workplace project commissioned by a couple of Designers that elected Porto as the place to raise their family.
oitoo found an extremely promising plot with a generous backyard and the rather odd remnants of a building renovation gone awry.
It seems likely that, as was the case here, architects can soon expect to be called upon to renovate the “refurbishments” that have taken place in historical centres in the last 10 years. Here, a preexisting XIX century building suffered a previous expansion to build touristic apartments. Works were never completed, and the half-built structure was left standing out like a sore thumb in a limbo of incompleteness, for five years.
Nevertheless, the existing plot lays bare potential qualities for a new project and a new use. There’s the sheer volume and surface available; the opportunity to have a generous garden in the backyard; the rather uncommon circumstance of having three façades in an otherwise continuous street front… There’s also the fact that part of the new structure is already built, and requiring a critical assessment of its validity under the new project premises in order to keep as much as possible of what’s already there.
The new brief requires for seamless integration of domestic life / work dynamics under one common roof, creating specific yet complementary and independent spaces allowing simultaneous use as a generous home and an inspiring atelier.
Our project looks to bring a sense of unity and coherence to the revised structure, looking for a building that will be respectful of its neighbors while maintaining its own specificity: an urban response to a long standing problem.
Judicious demolitions will remove part of the recently juxtaposed, excessive, volume. The preexisting stone walls are kept, as is most of the newly added concrete structure. The challenge is to incorporate all these disparaged elements in what will hopefully read as a coherent building.
Ground floor areas, of greater public engagement, are reserved for work and atelier spaces. One generous living area in the first floor overlooks the garden, acting as a hinge between working areas, below, and bedrooms, above.
The project answers to the outstanding sustainability requirements of the brief by displaying a strong commitment to reuse of preexisting elements, taking the greatest advantage of façade and volume to generate natural cross ventilation, incorporating sustainably sourced materials for insulation and flooring, privileging a straightforward detailing strategy that declines to clad surfaces that can be exposed without losing aesthetic appeal and by installing all sensible systems of collecting and using available energy and hydric resources.