The Waterfall House by Andres Remy Architects
Andres Remy Architects designed the Waterfall House in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

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The waterfall house was conceived by the request of a young business man in a closed neighborhood. The particularities and requisites of the client, among with the lot’s characteristics, established the path to follow in the design process. The borders of the small lot we are referring to, seem to disappear in the predominant visuals: the lake. The surrounding houses, the sun’s path and the visual were needed to understand the emplacement.
At the back of the lot, at the ground level the lake has a shy presence. So it was considered to raise up to get a better look at the lake. This is the reason why it was decided to place the social area in the upper level, conquering the panoramic views to the lake during the day. It is there where the water shows up. Unexpected at that height, it embraces the architecture and paints it with reflections, bringing life and movement. Appearing and disappearing to the eyes of the user, relaxing with it’s sound, dazzling with reflects, going through a path that stimulates the senses.
The shallow pool expands the house limits, making them infinite. It erases the line between natural and artificial, inside and outside. The elevated water falls, as a waterfall, over the swimming pool in the lower floor, refreshing the rooms and providing privacy at the same time. The water fall also filters the northern light making it less harmful.
The waterfall is the icon of this house; this is why it was named after it. About the functionality of the house, we designed flexible spaces, so it could be adapted as much as to the social active life of our client, as to the needs of a future family. The flexibility allows isolating the private areas in the lower floor from the public areas in the first floor and part of the lower floor. As a way to connect the street life with the inside of the house, was designed a mixed use room, used as a garage, playroom or to host parties.
The vertical circulation in triple height baths the inside with cenital light, joining the different levels. The volumetric game outside and inside vanishes at the back, opening the spaces to the lake. The balance between full and empty tries to avoid the adverse effects big windows may cause to thermal isolation. In contrast, the front presents a closed design holding the service areas and giving privacy to the house.
Visit the Andres Remy Architects website – here.
Photography by Alejandro Peral & Juan Raña
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Jimw on 30 Sep 2010 at 8:35 pm #
This was designed by an architect? I suppose there are those projects that are needed to make other projects look good.
BjZ on 01 Oct 2010 at 5:18 am #
Not bad, i’ve seen better and i’ve seen worse. The exterior could have been more inviting and less drab/dull. The gray finish just does not do it for me.
What do you mean Jimw?
Michael McTigue on 01 Oct 2010 at 5:27 am #
Where did that kitchen come from? This place is a mess.
Alexandra on 01 Oct 2010 at 6:29 am #
Very cool. Love the perimeter pool that feeds the waterfall.
shane on 01 Oct 2010 at 9:35 am #
I agree Jimw, ouch. At least the waterfall will daily remind the owners of the world’s quickly diminishing fresh water. And who picked the furnishings?
thesomnambulant on 01 Oct 2010 at 12:17 pm #
it has some interesting elements, but on the whole seems too enthralled with its identity as “the waterfall house.”
Janson on 01 Oct 2010 at 1:12 pm #
just curious about the evaporation rate for a waterfall like that? In an “average” pool in California it’s something like 200-300 gallons per week in the summer. With a waterfall, I wonder if you might not actually get more like thousands of gallons of water per week lost. Would be interesting to know…
Bryan on 01 Oct 2010 at 3:22 pm #
That is a box, laid on another box, beside another box, with flat plane surfaces that roll up to house superfluous machines.
mathieu on 01 Oct 2010 at 4:13 pm #
in my opinion JIMW said everything that needed to be said
Christian on 04 Oct 2010 at 1:53 am #
That’s what usually happens when a whole house is designed around one gimmick. All thoughts went into one detail and the rest was done in a rush (or by the trainee?)
rkg on 04 Oct 2010 at 6:56 am #
Fantastic…..clean lines and great use of concrete!
luz on 04 Oct 2010 at 6:54 pm #
… simple house , with a great surfaces of water!