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Costa Rican House, Casa Kike, Building, Architect, News, Property, Home,
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Casa Kike : Costa Rica Architecture Information
Residential Project in Central America by Gianni Botsford Architects
Casa Kike : a writers retreat, Cahuita, Costa Rica
Gianni Botsford Architects (GBA) is bringing new architectural
life to the Caribbean by reappraising the architectural heritage
of the region and reviving indigenous techniques. However, by coupling
them with modern design technologies and aesthetics, GBA has created
an eco-architecture that is remarkably light, impacting on its surrounding
only minimally both physically and environmentally.
This house for a writer in Costa Rica is nearing completion. Contrasting
with the concrete aesthetic of the GBAs award-winning Light
House in London, it is a lightweight timber structure raised 1.2 m
above the ground on round wooden stilts.
The main structure sits on a timber base, raised on the stilts. These
rest on small concrete pad foundations, poured into individual pits.
This method, along with much of the project has gleaned from the local
labour force. GBA has also taken reference from native building styles
and materials, rather than the western-influenced architecture favoured
by wealthier Costa Ricans. The load-bearing element of the two pavilion-like
buildings is an intricate pattern of diagonal timber beams and columns.
Designed for both structural and aesthetic qualities, the beams are
up to 10 m long by 355 x 50 mm: all are sourced from local hardwoods,
Laurel, Cachá and Surá, as is the timber cladding and
decking for the raised walkway, which connects the pavilions. This
expertly crafted interior contrasts with the external cladding, which
is corrugated steel sheeting, as used on many low cost Costa Rican
dwellings.
To date, much construction in the Caribbean has been copied from Californian
and Hispanic styles. In fact, the property is a good example of the
two very different architectural styles of Costa Rica. The Artists
Retreat is built within the grounds of an existing typical one-storey
cobbled-together Cahuita house, such as dot the beach-front. Both
buildings combine to create the whole property: the older house, which
will be refurbished as guest quarters and the main kitchen, while
the new pavilions are the artists main residence.
The design of the new property has been influenced by GBAs trademark
use of the latest technology to get the most out of the building and
its site. Using environmental software, the architect has plotted
the sun movement, prevailing winds and desired views onto the site
to find the optimum position and orientation for the new building.
In addition to these parameters, the client also insisted that no
trees be felled.
The shape of the two pavilions parallelograms - reacts to the
environmental results: it assists in promoting the best views and
ventilation, while keeping the low sunlight out of the interior spaces
and screening them from neighbouring properties. The length of the
walkway between the pavilions was also calculated for optimum efficiency.
At twice the length of the main building, it ensures that the smaller
pavilion is not in the larger ones wind shadow;
that it benefited from the ocean breeze as much as the main building
does.
The larger pavilion is the artists daytime work and contemplation
space. Its single-pitched roof rises from 3 m to 4.75 m to create
a high end elevation with a large facade facing towards the sea. This
is completely glazed with louvred panels, which are common in local
architecture. The louvres enable inhabitants to effectively open the
entire façade and allow the sea breeze to flow through the
space, which is home to the writers collection of thousands
of books, a writing desk and a grand piano.
The smaller rear building houses the bedroom and bathroom. It is the
same shape but 2/3rds the size of the larger pavilion and orientated
so that its highest façade points towards the jungle. The walkway
between the two interior spaces is to be landscaped to include a small
pool and over 200 plants: it is seen as an outdoor living space, as
large as the main studio, which nestles between avocado, mango and
cashew trees.
Casa Kike Costa Rica information from Iloniemi in 2008
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American
Architecture
Casa Kike Costa Rica - Building Information
Client: I.I. Magdalen, Cahuita, Costa Rica
Architect: Gianni Botsford Architects, London, UK
Project architects: Gianni Botsford, Toby Burgess
Design team: Gianni Botsford, Toby Burgess, Richard Green, Sam Craig, Anahi
Copponex
Structural engineer: Tall Engineers, London UK
Contractor: Lechenne Construction, Hone Creek, Costa Rica
Interior architect: Gianni Botsford Architects, London, UK
Floor surface (total) 131 m2
Floor surface (net) 113 m2
Volume (total) 578m3
Volume (net) 408m3
Programme:
Date design (month, year) Sept 05-August 06
Start construction (month, year) August 06
End construction (month, year) April 07
Building cost VAT excl (installations included) £55,000
Location:
north of Panama, south of Nicaragua
Casa Kike : RIBA International winner 2008
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Casa Kike Costa Rica : page - adrian welch
/ isabelle lomholt |
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