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Zé Home by PARATELIER

By Jessica Mejias

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Zé Home is a residential project completed by PARATELIER in 2014.

It is located in Palmela, Portugal.

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Zé Home by PARATELIER:

“Inhabited since prehistoric ages due to its privileged and strategic location, Palmela presents nowadays as the result of the influence of the different cultures that successively inhabited that area until today. The presence of the Medieval Castle on the landscape is evident. This becames a dual relationship specially on clear days, when, from the castle keep, the landscape opens up to Lisbon. In addition to this strong historical identity, the territory integrates two of the most important protected areas in Portugal: the Arrábida Natural Park and the Sado Estuary Nature Reserve. History and Landscape merge in one place. In the heart of this small village, a void is subjected to the presence of the castle and the surrounding landscape: the Barris Valley.

Thus arises a new volume, firmly anchored to the ground, which consists of a concrete monolith, with simple lines, that relates to the massive figure of the castle and, at the same time, to the geometry of the articulated roofs of the surrounding. This construction redefines and concludes the limit of the facade of the Boa Vista Square, strengthening its structure.

The surfaces and materials reveal the construction process of the building (like the castle itself), establishing not only the geometric relationship with the environment but also the chromatic relationship through the use of ochre pigment added to concrete (tone present on the roofs and facades that make the urban landscape of Palmela). The wooden panels used for concrete casting imprint their texture to the continuous surface of the exterior facades, giving them a natural pine vein relief. After cleaning and planed, these panels were recovered and reused on the inner floors, walls, and furnisher, establishing the same metric rhythm inside and outside of the house.

The spatial organization is divided by three levels, distributed by a wooden staircase. On the ground floor, an open space, lower than the road level, constitutes as an access lobby, characterized by the natural light. On the first floor it’s located the more private areas of the house, organized along a patio situated on one side of the lot that ensures their optimal illumination and ventilation conditions. The second floor aggregates the areas designated to the social life of the house, where the openings were designed to capture different landscapes, with different scales, at different times of the day.

From the study area of the room that faces the Boa Vista Square it’s possible to track its daily movement fluxes; at noon, the opening of the dining room frames a static image of the castle and, at sunset, the opening of the living room encloses the extensive verdant vineyards of the Barris Valley landscape.”

Photos by: Leonardo Finotti

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About Jessica Mejias

Jessica is a resident of Madrid, where she often can be found stalking the halls of the Prado Museum, hoping to catch a glimpse of Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights. An Art History graduate, she enjoys admiring art and architecture, reading, and keeping young by playing video games. Learn more about HomeDSGN's Editorial Process.

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