ARRIAGA tries to challenge this situation by taking advantage of a very particular set of circumstances, the coincidence whereby the Author and the Owner are one and the same.
This work was carried out according to an Action-Research methodology, abdicating from the usual intermediate productive processes (such as drawing, technical drawings, 3D simulations, models, etc.) in favor of direct manipulation of materials and spatial limits. The decisions were made on the site, through the user’s physical experience of the site.
In a building thought to be pre-1840, we discovered a highly fragmented labyrinthine apartment. It lacked proportion and consisted of spaces devoid of natural light. Our main aim was to select and focus on the element of the apartment that was of the utmost importance, providing light, ventilation, and scale to this element, and recycling the remainder, using it to support the central feature.
A glass curtain now opens onto a patio that had previously been closed up, the main room features raised ceilings, while the ancient interior walls have been opened up to create mezzanine floors. Pieces of original furniture have been repurposed as architectural elements and the previously unnoticed stones have been highlighted as features in the garden.
The result is an atypical rehabilitation, which ironically does not reject either the traditional “typologies” or the existing material panoply. ARRIAGA is a mannerist operation gaining control over an existing space.
Selected Project
Open House Lisboa, 2018
Open House Lisboa, 2017
Year – 2016
Direct Consultation – Private client
Location – Rua Presidente Arriaga, Lisbon, Portugal
Area – 145,25 sq.m
Budget – undisclosed
Status – built
Year – 2016
Direct Consultation – Private client
Location – Rua Presidente Arriaga, Lisbon, Portugal
Area – 145,25 sq.m
Budget – undisclosed
Status – built
Partners – Paulo Albuquerque Goinhas
Photography – Inês Subtil, Ricardo Gonçalves