Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Exterior Photography, WindowsTiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Exterior Photography, ForestTiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Living Room, Table, Windows, Chair, BeamTiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Table, Chair, Countertop, BeamTiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - More Images+ 5

Lo Barnechea, Chile
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Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Marcos Zegers

Text description provided by the architects. The Tiny House project arises from the commission to propose a small neighborhood in the commune of Lo Barnechea (Santiago), which would be named after Pueblo La Dehesa. Under contemporary and sustainable eaves, it was asked to design a small town composed of three typologies of prefabricated and small housing. Type A house, 24.5 m2, considers a bedroom and a bathroom, the second B -type B, 69.02 m2, includes two bedrooms and a single bath. Finally, type C, 63 m2 housing, consisted of two bedrooms and two bathrooms.

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Table, Windows, Door, Chair, Beam
© Marcos Zegers

The three typologies included a kitchen, a dining room, and a living room (living). The project considered an organic assembly to form sets from 12 units, to finally achieve 600 modules. This totality was designed to include small services within the neighborhood, such as coffee, bakeries, and gourmet warehouse, among others. Its purpose was to form a cluster system in the manner of a densified pedestrian town that is immersed in a park open to the mountains and the mountain buttuestra. For this reason, we saw a fundamental understanding of these units as a pixel within a larger system (considering the final goal of 600 pieces).

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Facade, Column, Handrail, Deck
© Marcos Zegers

To respond to this requirement, it was necessary to understand the whole as a totality, giving rise to generating organic urbanization. First, we sought to move away from regular urbanization designs that do not allow the deployment of life and meeting places. It is here that the intention of Cazú Zegers appears and his study for generating organic urbanization, where the design concept was characterized by observing the behavior of a dense forest.

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Kitchen, Table, Chair, Countertop, Beam
© Marcos Zegers

This finally led to experiencing the concept of botanical shyness, which refers to the ability of trees to detect the adjacent tree, so they avoid ranking, generating small alleys between them. This, in turn, allowed us to design and plan how each piece is located in the place, generating groups with its small pedestrian passages. Citing botanical shyness these units were grouped in the territory, putting together the small town through this foliage system.

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Interior Photography, Living Room, Table, Windows, Chair, Beam
© Marcos Zegers

The main material worked was Pine Clear wood abroad and iron in the case of some elements. One of the architectural inventions that stands out in this project is the strategic prefabrication work to solve the three modular typologies. In turn, another of these inventions was the steel staircase, which worked and was inspired by Japanese origami.

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Exterior Photography, Forest
© Marcos Zegers

This defined that a piece of steel was manipulated as a sheet of paper, which gives the project a sculptural element. On the other hand, the doors were worked invisible, avoiding incorporating a frame to deliver to the inhabitant a sensation of wide space within the module. This same strategy, in addition, allowed a clean and modular result of homes when looking on the outside, which is also visualized on its terraces that project the internal space.

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Marcos Zegers

The interior design proposal aimed to highlight spaces for the deployment of life, incorporating elements that supported a greater sense of luminosity and amplitude. The interior design of the house was in charge of Zegers and Figueroa, and the materialization of furniture was carried out by Bontempo. The bath and kitchen artifacts are MK, while the construction of modular housing was made by Modular RCM.

Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura - Exterior Photography, Forest
© Marcos Zegers

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Cite: "Tiny House / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura" [Casa Tiny / Cazú Zegers Arquitectura] 29 Feb 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/996996/tiny-house-cazu-zegers-arquitectura> ISSN 0719-8884

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