139 SCHULTZ | CPDA ARQUITECTOS
RED CONCRETE HOUSING Mexico City / Mexico / 2018
"139 SCHULTZ" offers the opportunity to live in an ideal place, located in the street of Miguel E. Schultz 139 San Rafael neighborhoods. It is one of the most bohemian neighborhoods of Mexico City, which still preserves its 19th century architecture and the atmosphere of a neighborhood of yesteryear that houses a proven variety of social classes, as the lower middle class neighborhoods coexist with cultural buildings , corporate, entertainment and historical.
Located one block from Sullivan Avenue where Mario Pani made the Plaza Hotel; Luis Barragán built the whole of an apartment building and two houses, each with a commercial space, Mathias Goeritz built the Eco Museum; Felix Candela built Autos Francia, which is currently a supermarket and still keeps its concrete umbrellas, and the sculptor Oliviero Martinez took over the sculptural set Monument to the Mother.
It is a building that responds to the demands of today's life. For its conceptualization this design is aimed at the inhabitant who seeks location, surplus value, quality of life and connectivity with the City.
139 SCHULTZ is a building for residential use linked to the city with a free floor for commercial use and parking; It contains a semi-basement for parking and warehouses with independent access. The 6-level building is made up of 21 departments of different typologies ranging from 60 m2 to 120 m2 approximately, with an interior distribution that favors ventilation and natural lighting in all living areas, with views towards their inner courtyards as well as the Street.
A central courtyard that separates from the southern boundary, serves to give a greater surface of interior façade, allowing a greater natural lighting and cross ventilation inside the houses. It also has three interior patios of different sizes which separate the common area from the private area.
It has five departments per floor, three towards the street front of Schultz and two towards the central courtyard. The volume of the building moved in an "L" shape to its patio, where corridors, balconies and terraces are created, community spaces that are considered as places of relationship of the condominium and intermediate areas between the exterior and the interior space.
The facade facing the street of Schultz composed of a double skin of red concrete and apparent red wall, is more sculptural, monolithic, like posters, to avoid the passage of direct light and grant privacy. Besides that it works as acoustic insulation against street noise. The interior facades are composed of red enameled partition and floor to ceiling windows of black aluminum wardrobe.
The interior layout is completely alien to the multifamily housing typologies of downtown Mexico City, and yet it retains that intense sense of what a dwelling is in the heart of the City.
The project has basically 2 types of departments, the front departments with 2 bedrooms and the interior apartments with 1 bedroom. The materials used are materials in apparent finishes, such as red concrete, red partition, quarry and wood; thought with natural and durable materials.
The solution of the distribution in the house is divided into two parts, a "living area" in the east and a "sleeping area" in the west, with wet rooms, bathrooms and kitchens, on one side. The balconies become a spatial extension of the living-dining room, a perception that is accentuated thanks to the floor-to-ceiling windows.
The interior route leads us through wide spaces to corners whose windows overlook small planters and the depths of intimate spaces. The exterior shape of the building, generated from this varied arrangement of spaces, is incomprehensible from the inside. However, the form is free and ductile, as if an interior force pressed the walls outward; the expansive character of the interior of the dwellings is a place for evasion and dreams.
The structure of red concrete in situ is left in sight. The façades covered with glass panels, appear fragile and light, contrasting with the heaviness of the concrete.
"139 SCHULTZ" offers the opportunity to live in an ideal place, located in the street of Miguel E. Schultz 139 San Rafael neighborhoods. It is one of the most bohemian neighborhoods of Mexico City, which still preserves its 19th century architecture and the atmosphere of a neighborhood of yesteryear that houses a proven variety of social classes, as the lower middle class neighborhoods coexist with cultural buildings , corporate, entertainment and historical. Located one block from Sullivan...
- Year 2018
- Work started in 2014
- Work finished in 2018
- Status Completed works
- Type Apartments / Multi-family residence
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