Built using granite masonry and wooden structure, the building has undergone several modifications and tenures over the years.
At the start of the project, the main façade and the interior wooden beams were the only original elements remaining. The object of this project is the building, three meters wide by seventeen meters long, on four uneven floors, thus taking up the entire plot of land, It was decided that all of the existing structural elements would be maintained and, from there, a new interior would be built, by making use of the imaginary platforms and assigning a function to each level.
The entrance takes up all of the ground floor, the bedroom is on the first floor, and the bathroom and laundry room are located in between floors.
The second floor is made up of the living room, kitchen and dining room leaving the office and terrace to be found on the top floor. The purpose of this distribution was to support the connection between the house’s social areas and scenery, in a gesture to the hill where it is located.
To connect these spaces, the staircase on the ground floor was hidden in such a way as not to reveal the house’s interior; from the first floor to the top floor, the new vertical access points were realized using straight-line stairs.
Another important aspect of the project was the distinct nature that each area possesses; thes stand out not only because of their different views, but also because of the various textures and colors that have been selected. On the ground floor, a coarse-sand plaster was used, along with the same brown color used for the exterior, so as to create an intimate ambiance that is evocative of the shelter provided by a cave. The stairwell, in brilliant white, leads into the house, two pink panels pop up along the way, hiding the guest bathroom and the storeroom from sight.
The first floor was found to have large blocks of yellow granite masonry which was perfectly fitted and then maintained in it’s entirely, giving this floor a yellowish colour somewhere between brown and white. On the more recently built two upper floors, the walls are smooth and white. The kitchen, which acts as a central element, epitomizes a unique area which brings together the living and dining rooms, designed as an area for socializing, where everyone plays a part in the ritual of cooking.
On arriving at the outdoor terrace we find, once again, brown in the wood and pink in the flowers, and this takes us back to the start of our journey through the house.
Outeiro House employs a typical 19th century structural system: wooden beams, wooden deck floors, - integral preserve in the reconstruction.
The first two floors are built in granite masonry. On the more recently built two upper floors the walls are coated with curved fiber plate p177ntfs at the front and lateral. At the backyard the facade is in curved cellular polycarbonate plate to illuminate the interior.
On the ground floor, a coarse-sand plaster was used, along with the same brown color used for the exterior, the stairwell, in brilliant white, leads into the first floor.
To connect all the spaces, there is a new vertical access points realized using straight-line stairs fixed in the wall.
The walls are smooth and white and the pavement in pine wood.
Location: Oporto, Portugal
Design Team: Fátima Barroso
Project year: 2005-2006
Client: Marta Mello Sampayo
Structural Engineering: Eng.Lopes de Oliveira
Services: Oval Engenharia
Photographs: Joao Ferrand
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