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Saturday, December 14, 2024

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

Argentinian architecture firm Atelier Matias Mosquera have designed a home with meaningful spaces that exude a feeling of calm and wellness.

MeCa House is a habitational experiment that revolves around sustenance; it best represents the homeowners’ lifestyle and their true self.

The food cycle is fundamental to the genesis of this project, and this is how Argentinian architecture firm Atelier Matias Mosquera represented it spatially: located in its centre, lies the heart of the house, a big kitchen materialized as a large counter-top, where all vital activities flow from. It is a meeting point, where the cooking, nurturing and sharing takes place.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

In spite of being in the middle of the house, the kitchen is surrounded by light, vegetation and food. To its south there is a pond, refreshing during the summer, but it also links the heart with blossoming aromatic flora. To the east, lies the ample orchard, purposely located close to the cooking area. To the north is where the Garden – Living room – kitchen axis is consolidated.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

Its remarkable how the heart of the house, while being in the geographic centre, still gives the impression of being on the outside. The interior / exterior limits are blurred by the architectural elements, such as the floor to ceiling windows that disappear behind the concrete walls. These support the upper floor volume, where the private dimension takes place, floating amongst the ash’s tree tops and once again, de-materializing the boundary that separates the outside from the inside.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

The exteriors are flooded with carefully curated houseplants, thus creating a special ambiance. This is also replicated on top of the house, as a culmination of the concept. One of the main notions for the garden was to preserve the previously existing Ash trees. According to mythology and popular beliefs, these trees have the power of allowing the energy to flow back and forth from the earth. Moreover, they are long lasting, which makes them into a perfect paragon of the struggle for life.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

On the ground floor, visuals are prolonged by the scenery, and connection to the outside is constant, despite of being sited in a residential area. The planes which the user looks into and connects to, are well thought through. Furthermore, where visual protection is needed, filters and thicker patches are added, still allowing air and light to come through them in every case.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

The result is a simultaneously opened and closed space. Conceived to be environmentally efficient, all of its spaces are naturally ventilated and illuminated, with eaves that act as a barrier during the summer, and which allow the sun to come through during the winter. The house is shut towards the south, but it opens up towards the north. The ventilation and lighting fluxes are essential to MeCa, and there is where materiality takes a leading role.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

The project is composed by a noble material palette: concrete on the ground floor and a charred wood volume on the upper floor (using the Japanese ancient technique Shou Sugi Ban). Their selection and composition isn’t by chance, but well thought out. For instance, the concrete structure on the ground level allows for spatial amplitude, essential for the visual expansion from the heart of the house.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

Furthermore, burnt wood is not only insect repellent, water and fireproof, but it provides the perfect natural frame to enclose the visuals, with a monolithic frame. In the evening, the charcoaled wood ceiling dark tone is heightened as it merges outwards with the night sky. These elements provide, along with exterior natural sunlight, a powerful but serene lighting on the ground floor. Its’ juxtaposition between the darkness of the ceiling, encourages a calm, diaphanous illumination which translates onto the user experience, freeing tensions, and thus contributing to a general wellness feeling.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

On the private Upper Floor area, amid the ash tree tops, you can feel the scent of the kiri-wood covered walls: They also contribute to the warmth and lighting that reigns between the bedrooms and resting areas. Finally, if you climb all the way to the top of the house, you’ll find a true Urban Oasis, bursting with diverse vegetation. The rooftop is visually entangled with the ash’s tree tops, creating a unique sensation.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

MeCa is an interactive house, not because its plagued with top notch technology, but because of what takes place on its outside: a rich, biodiverse world where there’s always something going on. Caterpillars turning into butterflies, which fly amongst the flowers and swirl around insects, bees feeding between the shrubbery. The orchard, with its seasonal crops, the water cycle that moves and reflows: from rain to an irrigation system, from pool to natural bio filter and vice versa, they’re all an infinite loop of natural sequences.

MeCa House by Atelier Matias Mosquera

We can see the modern influence of architects such as Le Corbusier, Kahn, amongst other greats, in the clean cuts and functionality of the design. However, the house also reveals the potential and contemporaneity that comes from constructive experimentation, the reinterpretation of the ways to inhabiting based on nutrition, and the consciousness of this whole process. In this game of tradition, reconstruction and metamorphosis, which embodies the circle of life itself, is where MeCa’s true richness lies.

www.matiasmosquera.com | IG: @ateliermatiasmosquera

Project Team:

Lead Architect: Matias Mosquera

Design Team: Matías Mosquera, Camila Gianicolo.

ConstructionTeam: Matías Mosquera, Camila Gianicolo, Marcelo Vita.

Landscape design: Ayerza & Samaría

Structural design: Pedro Gea

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