It’s long, linear and lovely. The INOUT House in Costa Rica is a newly built modern home that brings the outdoors in by way of large glass horizontal panes that frame the structure, skyights and an atrium. Even the inviting L-shaped pool breaks the barrier between indoors and out.
INOUT House in Costa Rica
The following copy is from the architect:
This house establishes an uninterrupted “inside-outside” relationship; a sequence of layers between the open and the intermediary. Frontal boundaries are blurred by sheets of glass and vegetation, framed by two horizontal planes, floor and ceiling, where the full and the void are related via a series of matter, water, vegetation and sky. Lateral boundaries establish the “full-void” relationship via a series of solid materials that close transversal views.
All bedrooms are arranged along the peripheries bordering the neighbors, leaving an intermediate space between volumes for social uses: kitchen-dining, living room, swimming pool, porch and barbecue.
Existing trees remain, uncompromisingly piercing the spaces they occupy.
The kitchen table and the kitchen itself shapes a sculptural floor that presides over the social zone. The black gloss of the Absolute Black granite dematerializes, through its reflections, the gesture of formal forcefulness.
A single material, Melina wood, dresses the inside and the outside. The apparatus varies: the outside is expressed as a relief while the inside is softened.
This house responds to the existing features of the landscape and reveals new dimensions of the topography of place. In its formalization and materiality, the experience of light, shadow, earth, water and air is intensified. The general form is readily readable and fluid in its articulation of space.
And the spectacular pool:
At night:
Street view and plans:
Architects: Joan Puigcorbé
Location: San Jose, Costa Rica
Area: 651.0 sqm
Project Year: 2015
Photographs: Jordi Miralles
images courtesy of arch daily