
Continental Villa
White walls, playful architectural forms, and large expanses of glass make this villa stand out. The central tenet of this design is the clear separation of public and private spaces.
Restorative seclusion
White walls, playful architectural forms, and large expanses of glass make this villa stand out. The central tenet of this design is the clear separation of public and private spaces.
Continental Villa
Continental Villa
White walls, playful architectural forms, and large expanses of glass make this villa stand out. The central tenet of this design is the clear separation of public and private spaces.
Continental Villa
The living room receives a great amount of sunlight with large openings of glass, and the conscious arrangement of furniture towards the view draws focus to the natural beauties surrounding the villa. This creates a very contemplative atmosphere. In contrast, the more private rooms attempt to embrace the more vegetated areas of the site to enhance the feeling of retirement and peace. The result is a calm and restorative domestic world, where openness and seclusion coexist.
The memory that this villa evokes is one of the European modernist movement. It hints at the time when modernism was first being conceived and offered a canvas with which to explore formality and its relation to the items that surround and inhabit a building.
White stucco walls capture shadow and seasonal change, and the circulation and flow of the home is intentionally built with a single-family owner in mind. Every part of the villa has the family’s best interests in mind.
Restorative seclusion
The living room receives a great amount of sunlight with large openings of glass, and the conscious arrangement of furniture towards the view draws focus to the natural beauties surrounding the villa. This creates a very contemplative atmosphere. In contrast, the more private rooms attempt to embrace the more vegetated areas of the site to enhance the feeling of retirement and peace. The result is a calm and restorative domestic world, where openness and seclusion coexist.
The memory that this villa evokes is one of the European modernist movement. It hints at the time when modernism was first being conceived and offered a canvas with which to explore formality and its relation to the items that surround and inhabit a building.
White stucco walls capture shadow and seasonal change, and the circulation and flow of the home is intentionally built with a single-family owner in mind. Every part of the villa has the family’s best interests in mind.
Area
1108 m²



























