Project: Nogal House
Architects: BGP Arquitectura
Location: San Pedro Garza Garcia, Mexico
Area: 7,211 sf
Photographs by: The Raws
BGP Arquitectura, an architecture practice from Mexico, has designed the Nogal House in San Pedro Garza Garcia, Mexico. The project is a luxurious, contemporary residence that is shaped by its environment. Its 7,211 square feet of living spaces are shaped with a curved outline. Its layout is asymmetrical in order to protect the site and the trees.
The interior gets plenty of sunlight during the day and the passive solar principles applied in this project minimize the energy footprint of the Nogal House.
Peaceful and monumental, the Nogal (Walnut) House adopts its name from the conditions defining its location in the site: it respects the existing surroundings by scattering patios around the walnut trees in the plot while the house adapts its contour to them.
Each space is joined with the exterior through particular gardens where colors and textures match with furniture in steel, rattan and wood, also designed by BGP. The entrance to the house is through the middle level, where living, dining room and kitchen are located besides a home theater that, by opening and closing doors, could be an independent extra room for the house.
A double height space connects this level with the upper library, studio and pool area with a grill. In the ground level, in touch with the patios, are the bedrooms and the family room, in a more intimate atmosphere.
Sustainability had special considerations in the design. The use of insulated double-walls and glasses, and the presence of few windows facing south, help reduce solar heat to the interiors, minimizing HVAC requirements.
Besides this, the use of crossed natural ventilation, the use of the ground as thermal mass insulation by burying the house partially, and the use of low maintenance vegetation, make an optimal use of water and electrical resources in the project.
–BGP Arquitectura
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