House in Pozuelo de Alarcón by A-cero Architects
A-cero Architects have sent us photos of a house they designed in Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid.
Full description after the photos….


















House in Pozuelo de Alarcón by A-cero Architects
The balance on which rest the three principles defining this construction, beauty, firmness and utility give us the key to confront its forcefulness, which emerges as a great sculptural work. It is a plastic reality: the singularity of the house defines a researching purpose that places value on aesthetic originality and artistic excellence. It stands out for its geometric purity, material sophistication and compositional elegance. The travertine marble shell is understood as a refuge and protection of identity. The purity of shapes creates a complex that is consistent with a structure formed only by concrete walls with an absence of intermediate pillars. It stands on a plot situated on a longitudinal north-south axis that brings sunlight into all the rooms. The slope of the land allows all the storeys to have an issue to the outside. The entire architecture appears framed within an exceptional environment: a garden of generous dimensions continues the harmonious lines of the construction, like a soft rug dotted with abundant planters and flowerbeds. A large steel beam marks the entrance via a colossal door. Inside, the window concept disappears and turns into openings. The size is suitable, proportioned and appropriate, thus conferring importance to the open spaces, the soft colours and the clean lines of the finishes. Beauty is localised in essential and simple minutiae and finds emotion in the detail, becoming the axis on which its logic turns and the point of support for its aesthetic projection. The visual experience of brightness and colour impregnates the architecture with its placid and unanimous sensibility. There is an evident link between the rooms and their outward continuity, with routes marked by the absence of doors, which are replaced by panels. Noteworthy in this line is the 17-metre window that shifts inwards, opening up the living room to the garden via one of the laterals. The rooms are comfortable, ample, with slight decorations and everything reduced to essentials, through volumes situated on two axes and two floors with a basement housing the garage in a startling design, the gym, a cellar, the music room and the indoor swimming pool. Revealing great skill in the layout, we find on the ground floor a large cylinder in marble, a material present in all the rooms on this floor, which organises what develops around it: the living rooms, dining rooms and service zone joined via a staircase with a magnificent red backdrop from which hangs a work of art in grand display and with the upper floor housing the bedrooms, the bathrooms finished in ash wood and the library, arranged as a great box of books, around a glass walkway overlooking the main drawing room.
Visit the A-cero Architects website – here.
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Joe on 07 Dec 2009 at 8:12 am #
this is amazing
Chris on 07 Dec 2009 at 11:55 am #
Grandeur! Very luxurious and relaxing.
Shenna on 07 Dec 2009 at 12:06 pm #
This is amazing! I love the set up and the way the windows are arranged in accoradance with the rooms. <3
F-J on 07 Dec 2009 at 12:15 pm #
I just love this piece of ART!
Just look at all that gorgeous stone !!!
A-cero’s team and vision is “pure, bold and direct”.
Scott on 07 Dec 2009 at 2:16 pm #
Amazzzzzzing. Like they made a warm home version of the Getty museum.
Greg Lowry on 07 Dec 2009 at 2:28 pm #
Magnificent!
Chad on 07 Dec 2009 at 7:14 pm #
Maybe it’s the 20 Eames Lounge Chairs in a circle or the shear magnitude of this home, but it made me cringe a bit. I’m all for admiring a bit of architecture at the expense of excess, but this is over the top for a single family home. Primary residence? Tell me this is a vacation home.
saul on 07 Dec 2009 at 7:20 pm #
Fantástico!
Oliver on 07 Dec 2009 at 9:57 pm #
breathtaking …
Mo on 08 Dec 2009 at 3:54 am #
It’s an awesome work!
margo on 08 Dec 2009 at 4:19 am #
the six eames are too much for me…
note the transparent martin logan spakers at the library
Aiban on 08 Dec 2009 at 5:54 am #
Phew! Breath taking!
I wish that beam from over the pool was not there. Maybe an attempt to ‘connect’ the pool and the house
Bruce on 08 Dec 2009 at 8:47 am #
This is nothing more than one of the worst examples of excess, in nearly every sense, displayed on Contemporist.com. Six Eames lounge chairs form a cozy comfortable seating area; a dining area with intimate seating for 16; and nearly every adjective (poorly) used in the English language (which the writer, designer or architect obviously does not understand, though not the worst example I’ve seen on this site) to attampt to justify this monument to excess and conspicuous consumption. After the first photo, I only continued to take the opportunity to express my disappointment with this display.
marica on 08 Dec 2009 at 8:50 am #
a little to much..
Andrew on 08 Dec 2009 at 6:49 pm #
The engineering for the overhang on top of the glass corner, and with the glass continuing so far down the lower side of the wall, is incredible.
A good amount of steel went into this structure
The form is incredible.
Roberto on 09 Dec 2009 at 12:26 am #
Bruce is spot on! Worst use of English; now about the design this house trumps anything from Zara Home. Had this been built about 80 years ago it might be noteworthy; the designers need to revise Le Corbusier among others. Money buys taste however, not necessarily good taste.
Tere on 09 Dec 2009 at 1:07 am #
My favorite rooms are the library and the office on top of the pool.
F-J on 09 Dec 2009 at 1:15 am #
To the pooh-poohers of this great piece of Art; Nothing says excess like excess!
designdummyblogger on 09 Dec 2009 at 3:00 am #
they have money… so splurge!
manu on 09 Dec 2009 at 5:02 am #
i love a-cero´s works.it´s amazing
Mauro on 09 Dec 2009 at 8:22 am #
This house is nice, it has interesting concepts, but 6 EAMS CHAIRS TOGETHER?? this is preposterous!
Out of that I think is ok, too much in some places, but the architecture is quite something…
Sam on 09 Dec 2009 at 2:53 pm #
It is not unusual in Spanish families to invite cousins and more distant relatives over for family occasions. It’s not outrageous to think they might actually use up every one of those 16 dining room chairs.
It’s interesting to see a modernist home with non-modernish furniture in it, but I don’t think it was integrated effectively. I have no problem with someone buying 6 Eames chairs if they can afford it, but that lounge room looks very unfriendly to me.
None of the rooms look particularly welcoming, which is sad for what appears to be a family home.
rcee on 09 Dec 2009 at 7:13 pm #
too much useless space, but indeed very nice
Rudy on 10 Dec 2009 at 2:01 am #
Looks more like some institute to me, be it a nice one.
bliss on 10 Dec 2009 at 5:24 pm #
Couldn’t they have created a more livable atmosphere? Looks and feels like a museum to me. I love art – but I wouldn’t want to live in the Solomon R. Guggenheim.
I appreciate the attempt. However humans should be the focus of any home, in my opinion.
There is one space where I will concede: The library. The heart of this home, and the only spot seemingly designated for soul… dead or alive.
Anatoli on 10 Dec 2009 at 6:34 pm #
bliss, different people have different ideas about what is a livable atmosphere. There are many people who would prefer this to whatever it is you think a livable atmosphere is.
It’s a bit arrogant to assume everyone should want to live the way you do.