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Resumen de Vivienda sustentable en el barrio de Los Reyes

Ricardo Vásquez Ochoa, Emilio José García Bidegorry

  • español

    Esta propuesta comenzó como un ejercicio proyectual en la asignatura “Vivienda popular” que imparte el doctor Carlos González Lobo en la maestría en arquitectura de la UNAM. Una vez terminado el curso, Ricardo Vásquez Ochoa, de Colombia, y Emilio José García Bidegorry, de Argentina, desarrollaron el proyecto con el incentivo de someterlo a concurso en los Holeim Awards for Sustainable Construction Latin America 2008.

  • English

    This proposal began as an exercise for the low-income Housing class, imparted by Dr. Carlos González Lobo for the master's degree in Architecture at UNAM. After finishing the course, we developed the project with the incentive of submitting it to the Holcim America 2008, a contest divided into two categories. "Eutropia" (our project) won second prize in the Next Generation category under 35 year old among 700 proposals from all across Latin America. At the immediate surroundings -an irregular pattern of narrow, winding streets- there are very few green spaces and complementary services. On site, 36 families live in precarious conditions, hence the need to raise infraestructure for a sustainable community. Since surroundings integration was a vital matter, we compressed the housing area by limiting their extension in order to achieve public areas. The residential development consists in four blocks of housing connected by stairs and service areas. the first of them is located at the access with an open ground floor, a multi-purpose first floor and a green roof for food production and recycling; 40 homes are grouped in the remaining three blocks, according to the model developed by Russian architect Moisei Ginzburg (1928). Stairs leading to a terrace-corridor on the first floor, by lowering or raising half a level, brings the same access conditions to all houses. Inside, each house has three out-of-phase spaces interspersed among half levels. A clearing house is offered to the neighborhood, a land extension hosts a tianguis (a street market) for trading self-produced food; families can use the rooms overlooking the street as retails or rental space. We planned this proposal in order to generate new architectural spaces that people can also take part of.


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