from: http://www.houzz.com and http://www.fabiogaleazzo.com.br
Hoover:
A colorful setting makes this 84 sq m property a dream to live in.
Before
interior designer Fábio Galeazzo came into the picture, this urban
shack was a run-down home built in the 1930s that had poor ventilation and low
ceilings. According to Galeazzo, there were many sleepless nights of wondering
how to breathe new life into the shack without destroying the home's existing structure.
"My clients are in the design industry, and they live in São Paulo — the
fifth largest metropolitan area in the world, so it's crowded and swelling with
people," says Galeazzo. "I wanted to create a weekend retreat that
separated them from the chaos that comes with living in an urban place without
destroying the home." The result, completed in June 2011, is a converted
urban shack with an open floor plan that incorporates the couple's love of
nature without shying away from color.
www.renttoown.ph |
Although São Paulo
enjoys temperate weather throughout the year, it still has to suffer through
some humid, subtropical days. Overlapping shade sails cool what's
stored underneath and extend the color patchwork on the interior and exterior
brick walls into the sky.
www.renttoown.ph |
Circles
and curves abound in the living room, with the suspended nest chair's circular
base, a round jute rug, the Chifruda chair's parabolic headrest and Galeazzo's
original creation, an orbital bookshelf window.
Galeazzo
says that developing a project that is so different from previous projects
brings "a certain level of anxiety in the process of construction and
design," but when the design and remodeling was completed, it was
incredibly rewarding to see the house's new incarnation.
Lines
blur between outdoors and indoors throughout the shack, and nowhere is that
more apparent than in the living room; the orbital bookshelf window beckons
light into the interior and visually brings the outside indoors.
www.renttoown.ph |
This image shows a
view of the spherical window from the outside along with the exterior stone
cladding, which provides the shack with thermal insulation.
www.renttoown.ph |
This close-up
celebrates the structural beauty of the Chifruda chair by Sergio
Rodrigues. Despite being in his 80s, the Brazilian modernist furniture designer
is still young at heart, evident in the playful yet still entirely functional
design of the chair.
www.renttoown.ph |
The
orbital kitchen designed by Galeazzo’s team rotates on an axis so you can turn
it facing the garden or living room for daily use. "The kitchen is capable
of integrating into both [garden and living room] spaces," Galeazzo
says. "They can choose if they want to prepare food outside on a sunny day
or if they want to watch the news from the television in the living room, which
they can see from the kitchen."
The
orbital kitchen is an articulation of how the house designs resists physical
and spatial barriers, which traditionally come in the form of walls and other
dividers.
www.renttoown.ph |
This
picture celebrates Galeazzo's midcentury-modern decor choices. TheBrunno
Jahara credenza, metal Emeco Navy chairs and Crown Major
Chandelier add a laid-back sensibility — and colorful geometry — to the
urban shack.
The
interior wood floors are FSC-certified timber planks, which means that
they didn't contribute to any forest destruction or come from companies
involved in human rights abuses.
www.renttoown.ph |
"We
call the exterior walls a kind of 'anticamouflage,' because visually the house
is meant to stick out from nature, but the design and retrofit building
technique of the house were meant to have complete and utmost respect for
nature," says Galeazzo.
Autoclaved
bamboo poles give the house the needed structure for more headroom.
www.renttoown.ph |
A glass
half-partition (not visible in this picture) behind the wood column
divides the wet room into two parts. The faucet tube is the chrome line hanging
from the roof, which, from a distance, sometimes fades into the steel picture
window frame.
www.renttoown.ph |
The exterior and
interior wall colors echo the Brazilian modernist painterTarsila do Amaral's
work, and everywhere in the shack, there is visual stimulation in the form of
color patchwork.
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