Project Description

Forest House

Technical Data

Location: Porto Feliz – SP, Brazil

Type of Construction: Residential Single Family

Site area: 14.300m²

Building area: 3.000m²

Project Beginning: 2018

Construction completion: 2022

Team

Authors: Fernando Forte, Lourenço Gimenes, Rodrigo Marcondes Ferraz

Creative director : Gabriel Mota

Managers: Desyree Niedo, Gabriel Mota, Guilherme Prado, Juliana Cadó, Luciana Bacin

Coordinators: João Baptistella, Larissa Sartori, Letícia Gonzalez, Priscylla Hayashi

Contributors: Amanda Domingues, Bárbara Dolabella, Bruno Suman, Caio Armbrust, Carolina Hirata, Diogo Mondini, Eduardo Saran, Eduardo Piovesan, Fabiana Kalaigian, Flávia Prado, Guilherme Canadeu, Gustavo Hohmann, Iacy Gottschalk, José Carlos Navarro, Julia Jobim, Julio de Luca, Karina Nakaura, Lucas Lima, Mariana Leme, Otávio Araújo Costa, Raquel Gregorio, Victor Lucena

Interns: Ana Paula Sapia, Aryane Diaz, Flávia Moura, Giovanna Custódio, Guilherme Pulvirenti, Henrique Dias, José Beltrami, Matheus Soares, Michelle Vasques, Rafael Mourão, Vinícius Romano

Photographer: Fran Parente

Constructor: Laer

Landscape designer: Raul Pereira

Lighting design: Studio IX

Adult and sculptural trees fill the central portion of this 14,000 m² plot of land in the Fazenda Boa Vista condominium, in the countryside of São Paulo. The drop, which
at first glance is delicate, assumes important proportions when we consider the entire extension of the territory.
These two elements – the trees and the unevenness – are the basis of the lot occupation strategy. With an extensive program, the house spreads out over the space, embraces the vegetation and creates opportunities for diverse paths and landscapes. Straight lines run through the terrain and delimit a park in its core. The slope adds volume to these lines, which become stone gables that reveal the topography and support pavilions that are attached to them. These same stone gables, as they enter the main body of the house, provide continuity to the landscape design and help organize the program together with other complementary, exposed concrete plans.
The wood, a third material, is added as a great covering plan. The wood, concrete and stone are gently separated from each other, reinforcing gaps through which one can pass or see between them.
Eventually, besides the small pavilions distributed around the ground, next to the stone gables, a large pavilion perches above the main block, defining the upper floor with rooms. It is orthogonal, guided by the geometry of the gables to the point of forming an expressive overhang in the courtyard between the floor blocks of the house.
The continuity between the internal and external spaces, characterized by the existence of several planes that organize the object and the landscape, reinforces the existence of patios of different sizes, where large sculptures demonstrate the clients appreciation for Brazilian art – also seen inside the house.

Isometric

Lower floor plan

Middle floor plan

Upper floor plan

Section