Showing posts with label Spain House Desing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain House Desing. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Houses In Barcelona By The Set Q ARCHITECTURE Spain

 This is another example of the common house designed by Q trying to ARQUITECTURA. This house is located in part of soil due to the division of a parcel which is already built. This cool house belonging to existing parents, and the new one it belongs to their son, the common house maintains a level of intimacy, despite sharing the common use of the court and without establishing a physical boundary between the two plots.

 Using a gentle slope cross-plot, a new home is at a level slightly lower than the present. The ground floor is protected from the point of view, while maintaining the wall, covering the difference between the two houses, so it can be fully glazed, in constant relation to the Court of the arcades.
 Upstairs was developed primarily through the prism invisible, concentrating all the gallery openings in the south. Features of this house is primarily made up by some key cases, clearly as a participation between the lightness and transparency in the floor, then upstairs in weight and large verandas and cantilever and continuous relationship between interior and exterior. See here for more information as soon as possible.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

High Wall Of The House In A Minimalist Style In Spain

This wall of the upper house, located in Cadiz, Spain is something to admire, literally and figuratively. Spanish architect Alberto Campo Baeza designed this contemporary house with a "less is more" attitude of a plan for the home outdoor living to the core, the design features plenty of entertainment areas Alfresco -. It is of 400m2, 170m2 interior life of its facilities. The cold, the white facade is an introduction suitable for minimalist interiors offering high walls of 18 m in height and simple decor that enhances the architectural purity of line. A window wall of the inner wall irradiated with natural light, while an interior courtyard adds an element outside of the house, with its orange trees incorporated into the structure of the terrace