Posts tagged "Architectural Musings" | Show All

13 August 2009

Ensuring You Want It Enough

On one side of our eat in kitchen, we have a large 3x3m opening that looks out into the rear garden.  Our plan is to transform this gap into a key “money shot” moment in our design.  But how?

Grand room facade

Looking around for inspiration, we found the pavilion at the Kampong Gardens in Coconut Grove, Florida.

Framing the view

Between brick columns, the architect has decided to erect wooden frames with no glass or screens.  It’s purely ornamental and fantastic.

The frames transform an otherwise typical line of columns into a series of windows that outline the garden beyond.  By creating this false barrier, the garden feels like it sits apart, heightening your sense of longing.  As they say, distance makes the heart grow fonder.

6 August 2009

Staging a Vista

While walking along Collins Avenue in South Beach, Miami, we passed by an alcove running alongside a hotel.

Staging a Vista

We were inspired by the way this space is carved with long paths that accentuate the depth of the site. We also liked how the bodega sits nestled within the greenery, framing the line of umbrellas and drawing the eye toward the mystery beyond.

Like many properties in Mérida, our property is also long and thin. The hope is to design our garden in a way that draws the eye deep into the site, where the back boundary connects and merges with the trees and buildings beyond. We are in the midst of developing a garden design that ultimately achieves this.

27 July 2009

An Urban Forest

While scouring Miami’s Design District oggling at high-end designer furniture we can only dream of owning, we stumbled upon this little courtyard surrounded by a dimpled copper fence.

Garden Lounge by Enzo Enea

This garden lounge, designed by landscape architect Enzo Enea, is about the size of our central courtyard, so we went inside and (over) analyzed it.

We love the strong horizontal and vertical lines working across the space. Seating is informal and the whole room seems equally capable of hosting an evening dinner party or a quiet afternoon with a book. With the sparse plantings composed of only a few species, the overall feeling is that of a restained urban jungle.

The only thing that gives us pause is the bamboo. Although beautiful, our landscape architect friend Patrick says that mosquitoes love to breed in the hollow branches and should therefore be avoided in mosquito-rich Mérida.

11 July 2009

Research is Tough

We decided to swing through Miami on the way home to research outdoor living spaces and gardens. With a camera in one hand and martini in the other, we scoured numerous hotels, art deco buildings and public gardens in the Miami area for inspiration.

Outdoor Lounge at the Setei Hotel.

Our first stop was the outdoor lounge (pictured above) at the Setei hotel in Miami Beach. Although far more decadent than anything we will construct, we were impressed by how well the space achieved a level of intimacy.

We have looked at a great many waterside seating areas for inspiration in our own  project.  Most, like the JH House, leave us feeling a bit cold.  The typical bright blue sheet of water with adjacent (but not integrated) seating area lacks a certain intimacy.  Great if you want to lay out with a book, but not the right setting for a dinner party with close friends.

By inserting seating areas into the pool, the outdoor lounge at the Setei got it just right.  Surrounded by water, we were able to admire it without disengaging from the table conversation.  Nestled this way, it felt private and serene.

The wooden canopy overhead added intimacy by subtly outlining an outdoor room within the larger courtyard.  The dramatic height of this canopy helped to lift us out of the courtyard and connect us with the sky above.

How all this applies to our renovation will require some more thought.

24 May 2009

Reinventing an Old Room

Historic colonial homes in Mérida were often built in stages.  Initially, a one- or two-room building was constructed hard up against the street.  Each room would have high 14 to 18 foot ceilings and attractive wood or iron beams for support.  Over the years, new rooms were tacked on the back of the houses with progressively lower ceilings and less ornate support (i.e. no fancy beams).  With the back of some houses being 100 years younger than the front, a walk through them is a journey through the ages.

A high beamed ceiling in a traditional Merida colonial.

If you were looking to buy an old colonial here, you would no doubt be shown many houses with high-beamed ceilings in the front rooms.  We certainly were.  We pictured ourselves restoring these rooms to their former glory and looking magazine perfect.

The problem is that we simply couldn’t imagine ourselves inhabiting these beautiful spaces.  In general, front rooms directly off the street are noisy.  Ours sounds like the waiting room in a bus terminal.  Also, with sunny weather all year round, who wants to be cooped up inside, especially in a room with few windows and no ventilation?

The front room of our house has all the problems mentioned above.  To add insult to injury, although moderately high, the ceiling is without beams, has no historic value and is just plain ugly.

Our ugly duckling of a ceiling.

The ugly duckling of a ceiling in our front room.

What do do? What to do? After staring at our design documents for the last four months, a solution finally arrived in the form of the DELETE key.  A single keystroke has blown away the roof and transformed the room into a light, airy entrance courtyard.  Add a fountain, a plant, 20-foot whitewashed walls, and we think we’ll have a winner.

The inspiring courtyard space of a riad in Marrakech, Morocco.

The inspiring courtyard space of Porte Royale, a riad in Marrakech, Morocco.

12 May 2009
In our latest design iteration we created a series of shutters that run the length of the central courtyard.  These shutters allow you to close off the living space when it’s either too hot, too wet or there are too many mosquitos about.  When favorable conditions return, they open up again, re-connecting the living room with the garden courtyard.  Instead of placing these shutters hard against the living room, we offset them by 1.2m to create a covered pathway that runs alongside the living room.  We imagine it looking something like the image above, albeit more tropical.  Doing this allows room for covered circulation through the courtyard as well as provides a thin buffer zone between the living and garden.

In our latest design iteration we created a series of shutters that run the length of the central courtyard.  These shutters allow you to close off the living space when it’s either too hot, too wet or there are too many mosquitos about.  When favorable conditions return, they open up again, re-connecting the living room with the garden courtyard. 

Instead of placing these shutters hard against the living room, we offset them by 1.2m to create a covered pathway that runs alongside the living room.  We imagine it looking something like the image above, albeit more tropical.  Doing this allows room for covered circulation through the courtyard as well as provides a thin buffer zone between the living and garden.

27 March 2009
Avoiding Disneyfication
Our design process is taking us around the world as we flip through photos taken on our travels, scour books and surf the internet for architectural ideas that guide us in our own design.
The House in Honda, Columbia (more images here) designed by Guillermo Arias and Luis Cuartas is one precedent to which we keep returning.
The living room pictured here demonstrates the kind of open, breezy feeling we are working to create in our house.  The indoor/outdoor space with vistas of the garden invoke the idea of lazy afternoons dozing in a hammock.
The building clearly has a lot of history, but the architects did not attempt to recreate an idealized colonial vision that never existed.  The spaces have been patched, cleaned up and modified for contemporary uses. The past is still present, but it happily coexists with modern times.

Avoiding Disneyfication

Our design process is taking us around the world as we flip through photos taken on our travels, scour books and surf the internet for architectural ideas that guide us in our own design.

The House in Honda, Columbia (more images here) designed by Guillermo Arias and Luis Cuartas is one precedent to which we keep returning.

The living room pictured here demonstrates the kind of open, breezy feeling we are working to create in our house.  The indoor/outdoor space with vistas of the garden invoke the idea of lazy afternoons dozing in a hammock.

The building clearly has a lot of history, but the architects did not attempt to recreate an idealized colonial vision that never existed.  The spaces have been patched, cleaned up and modified for contemporary uses. The past is still present, but it happily coexists with modern times.

1 March 2009
Mérida’s historic center has a few modern homes sprinkled throughout its streets.  There aren’t many, but when you spot one, it definitely stands out against the neighborhood’s colonial fabric.
Today, the government has strict rules that prevent façades like this from being built in the historic center.  You can make your home totally modern on the inside, but the façade (and to some extent the front room) must be preserved.  These rules are, for the most part, followed.
We are by no means strict preservationists (more on preservation). Walking around, we wonder to what extent historic neighborhoods should be kept homogeneous and static. Perhaps oddities like this house inject a level of diversity that allows a city to move forward while keeping a firm eye on its past.  Or perhaps modern forms like these should remain, as they are in Mérida, relegated to newer neighborhoods.

Mérida’s historic center has a few modern homes sprinkled throughout its streets.  There aren’t many, but when you spot one, it definitely stands out against the neighborhood’s colonial fabric.

Today, the government has strict rules that prevent façades like this from being built in the historic center.  You can make your home totally modern on the inside, but the façade (and to some extent the front room) must be preserved.  These rules are, for the most part, followed.

We are by no means strict preservationists (more on preservation). Walking around, we wonder to what extent historic neighborhoods should be kept homogeneous and static. Perhaps oddities like this house inject a level of diversity that allows a city to move forward while keeping a firm eye on its past.  Or perhaps modern forms like these should remain, as they are in Mérida, relegated to newer neighborhoods.

22 February 2009
The gate at Hacienda Yaxcopoil was built in the Mudéjar­ or Hispanic-Moorish style.  This style of architecture is found all over Mexico and reflects a prevalent style coming out of Andalucia, Spain during the 16th century.
We see echos of this style in the colonial doors of our own house, as well as many inner courtyards and arcades in abundance throughout Mérida.  How did it all come about?  We started researching and found this great article.

The gate at Hacienda Yaxcopoil was built in the Mudéjar­ or Hispanic-Moorish style.  This style of architecture is found all over Mexico and reflects a prevalent style coming out of Andalucia, Spain during the 16th century.

We see echos of this style in the colonial doors of our own house, as well as many inner courtyards and arcades in abundance throughout Mérida.  How did it all come about?  We started researching and found this great article.

21 February 2009
As research for our renovation, we spend a lot of time visiting beatiful old haciendas dotted throughout the countryside near Mérida.  Some are in ruins, some are museums and others are fancy hotels with pictures of Bill Clinton on the walls.
For the hotels, we sneek in under false pretenses.  When challenged, our pretend back story is that we are looking for a 70th birthday venue for Stan’s father.
Yesterday we visited the hacienda in Yaxcopoil.  We were particularly struck by the long run of six rooms, opening into one another, along the front.  At each end large windows opened to carry a cooling breeze through the rooms.
We have been struggling with bringing ventilation into our own house.  Feeling the breeze in these interconnected rooms was fuel for thought.

As research for our renovation, we spend a lot of time visiting beatiful old haciendas dotted throughout the countryside near Mérida.  Some are in ruins, some are museums and others are fancy hotels with pictures of Bill Clinton on the walls.

For the hotels, we sneek in under false pretenses.  When challenged, our pretend back story is that we are looking for a 70th birthday venue for Stan’s father.

Yesterday we visited the hacienda in Yaxcopoil.  We were particularly struck by the long run of six rooms, opening into one another, along the front.  At each end large windows opened to carry a cooling breeze through the rooms.

We have been struggling with bringing ventilation into our own house.  Feeling the breeze in these interconnected rooms was fuel for thought.