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Garden House by David Guerra Architecture and Interior

By Eric Meunier

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David Guerra Architecture and Interior has completed the Garden House, a renovation project of a house built thirty years ago in Brazil.

Garden House by David Guerra Architecture And Interior:

“An 80’s house.

The director of a company, with the head office in London chooses a house in the 80’s decade, projected by a big architect, to transform it into your residence in Brazil.

The office was hired to make a reconstruction and interiors project. One of the main wishes was to make the interior/exterior integration bigger, making the garden participate in the day-by-day of the house, bringing more light to the rooms that used to be too dark.

Another important point was to make this house more modern, giving new spaces and new way to use them, compatible with a new lifestyle and a new epoque of new residents. Integrate spaces, destroy walls, transform doors, windows and attach protection covering, substitute products, recuperate structures, new electric, new hydraulic, new illumination, an atelier, a wine cellar, gourmet kitchen, bathroom, sauna, deck and pool. The reconstruction was huge.

All the bathrooms, kitchen and service clear covering, giving an opposite idea of the wood in the structures. Only in the gourmet kitchen the sand tone was chosen, with the use of the demolition wood, ceramic Brennand, and granite capão bonito, enhanced by the proximity from the green in the garden. The idea of the house is to present itself always opened for friends, so, the architect found in the interior design the intention do dialog these integrated and cozy spaces, providing lightness, invitation and meeting, in addition to host several personal objects, got by the owners and loaded with a memory value. Natural characteristic, neutral and raw tones give coziness.

Furniture with the bottom distant from the floor, that goes from the stick feet and armchairs, and acrylic chairs have the intention to make the spaces bigger, light and fluid. The mix of styles, which goes from the 50’s, pass by the classics, ethnics, contemporaries, are incremented with Brazilian references. The covering of white tile used in the kitchen, dining, bathrooms and service area has the function to give coziness and, at the same time, light up the house, once the structure, floor and ceiling were made of wood.

The superior windows in wood shutters gave space to big blindex openings and a new glass coverage appears, in the center of the fireplace, bringing illumination to the house. In the illumination, there was a concern of illuminating well the rooms, keeping this coziness atmosphere. The balconies and the decks got bigger to create ambiance without interfering the flow. The old bar and pantry are integrated to the TV room, as soon as the integrated dining, without walls, to the kitchen and dining room. The little closets were transformed in wardrobe, expanding the bathrooms.”

Photos courtesy of David Guerra Architecture And Interior
Source: Contemporist

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About Eric Meunier

Currently the Owner and Chief Executive of HODYO Design, Eric Meunier's expertise in the design industry spreads over 20 years. He was the driving force behind HomeDSGN's early success, founding this website in 2011. Today, he loves to channel his passion for design into remodeling houses and transforming interior spaces with his keen eye for detail and architectural finesse. Learn more about HomeDSGN's Editorial Process.

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