Flavio Castro Designs A Floating Box House For Himself In São Paulo
Designed by the Flavio Castro, who leads Brazilian practice FCstudio, for his own use, the Box House was conceived as ‘a floating opaque box’, as himself explains. view more

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Flavio Castro Designs A Floating Box House For Himself In São Paulo
Designed by the Flavio Castro, who leads Brazilian practice FCstudio, for his own use, the Box House was conceived as ‘a floating opaque box’, as himself explains. view more
From the street, there is almost nothing to see. Just a wall, a gate, and the quiet suggestion that something private lies beyond. In São Paulo, where density and security shape daily life, one architect decided his own home would not compete for attention. Instead, it would withdraw, creating a calm interior world hidden from public view.
Located in São Paulo, Brazil, the Box House was designed by architect Flavio Castro of FCStudio as a home for himself. Set on a corner site in a low rise residential neighborhood, the proportions of the land influenced every decision. The house turns inward, presenting an opaque exterior to the street while opening selectively through only two of its four facades. A concrete privacy wall surrounds the property, intended to one day be softened with ivy, while a weathering steel front gate and garage door introduce contrast and texture against the raw concrete -- via contemporist
FCstudio designed Bento House in São Paulo, Brazil -- via ArchDaily
Text description provided by the architects. The New York Apartment´s project, located in the city of São Paulo – Brazil, is the result of a creative process that took into account important conditions. The family, consisting of a couple and two young daughters, before moving to this apartment, lived in the Netherlands for 8 years. Thus, constant references to Dutch culture and design permeated the composition process, so that the family would continue to identify with its own home. In addition, we considered the specific logistics of the four residents’ routine, categorizing the spaces according to the real needs of each one. Exclusive suites, one office and a playroom arose because of that.
The formal and chromatic composition brought together areas with the same use, generating four programmatic boxes, within the single space with double height ceiling. This concept can be seen in the schemes that follow this memorial. The first box consists of the entrance hall and access to the toilet. The ruby color highlights this space that works as a break between inside and outside the apartment. In front of the elevator, we exposed the couple’s collection of Dutch miniatures, so that right at the entrance, there is a connection with the family’s affective memory. The second box consists of the table that separates the kitchen from the living room, a large piece of furniture that received tensoflex as a lighting device that simulates the sunrise and sunset light, through the dimming of the LEDs. Through this warm and changeable light, we managed to change the atmosphere of the apartment’s integrated and single space.
The third box is the mezzanine that houses the office and the fourth box is the bookcase of the playroom. The materials follow the same color palette. The use of light wood tones was the artifice that brought us closer to the initial references.
The furniture was brought from the Netherlands, with some pieces developed by FCstudio, which also designed the joinery. The design of the New York Apartment translated the family’s emotional desires into interior design, at the same time considering its necessary and particular functionality.
Architects: FCstudio Location: Brooklin, Brazil Area: 178 m² Year: 2020 Photographs: Pedro Kok Manufacturers: B&B Italia, Baxter, Brokis, Cassina, Classicon, Moooi, Moroso, VitrA, Carla Chaim, Dpot Objeto, Estúdio Bola, FCstudio, Fenix Interiors, Fernando Mota, Jacqsa, Macaparana, Maria Laet, Marilia Razuk, Papel Assinado, Parket, Portobello, Raquel Arnaud, STR, Uniflex, Van Der Horst
via
Nova York Apartment by FCstudio Text description provided by the architects. The New York Apartment´s project, located in the city of São Paulo - Brazil, is the result of a creative process that took into account important conditions.
Flavio Castro sees your windows and does you one better. The Brazilian architect and founder of FCstudio designed himself a one-bedroom house in São Paulo where nearly all of the walls open to the outside. The aptly named Box House is a house that’s shaped like a box. But what the simply shaped home lacks in geometric grandeur it makes up for in indoor-outdoor magic.
-- via Curbed
Located in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, the Box House was designed by Flavio Castro of architecture firm FCStudio, for himself to live in.
http://www.contemporist.com/architect-designed-home-for-himself-in-sao-paulo/
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