Juranda House by Apiacás Arquitetos
Apiacás Arquitetos designed the Juranda House in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

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Description from the architects:
In designing our house on an urban plot with dimensions of 6 x 24m, located in Rua Juranda, Vila Beatriz, São Paulo, we were forced to establish certain criteria for the construction of a house of approximately 150 sqm.
As the terrain of the plot had an accentuated slope, the bottom of the plot being over three and a half metres below the pavement level, the building was distributed over half levels, separated by a three storey void which contains the staircase access to the floors. This void organises the spaces of the house: living room, dining room and kitchen on the ground floor as well as three bedrooms, two bathrooms, office and a ‘deck’ on the upper floors. The house is built up to the edges of the plot and consequently it is lit and ventilated from the front and rear.
The idea was to make the house as transparent as possible, in a way that would establish a relationship with the external areas. In order make this viable, we designed the openings at the front and rear of the house to be on the same axis and to be three metres wide. When open, the glazing elements slide behind the walls uniting the internal and external spaces.
We sought to execute the construction work in the most economical manner possible. From the start, we tried to avoid as far as possible any kind of earth moving, which is always an onerous part of the budget of any construction. For this reason, all of the slabs, including those on the ground floor are supported on the structure of the lateral walls of the house. The house is given structure by steel reinforced concrete cast on site with the slabs in prefabricated concrete remaining visible after construction. All of the brickwork is in ceramic blocks covered with a white render. We opted to put all of the house’s infrastructure on the lowest floor, making use of the nature slope, this includes: a water cistern, boiler and sewage treatment system.
Overall, this is a project that tried to limit the dimensions, to the strictly necessary, of areas such as bedrooms and bathrooms so that the communal spaces would be more generous even within this narrow plot, promoting communal living, preferably with friends.
Visit the Apiacás Arquitetos website – here.
Photography by Pregnolato and Kusuki
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Apisan on 22 Jul 2011 at 2:03 pm #
Brazilian architecture is one of the best in the world. Unfortunately professionals in Brazil don’t get organized enough to promote it well. Congratulations for the project team. Simple design but I sure the owners love it.
Gisele on 22 Jul 2011 at 3:35 pm #
I love this house. I mean, I love all houses and most of the other projects posted in your blog, but this house feels more realistic to me, something I could probably build for myself and my family. I was wondering if you could get the architects to tell us how much did they save (as a percentage perhaps) in building this house as compared to traditional building of the same size in São Paulo?
tylermckenzie on 22 Jul 2011 at 3:46 pm #
what a lovely house, something about a real wood burning fireplace that makes me feel all cozy.
J.S. on 22 Jul 2011 at 5:13 pm #
where’s the third bedroom mentioned? I didn’t see it …
Gustavo Moreira on 22 Jul 2011 at 5:53 pm #
I’m from sao paulo, br.
I can say that the architecture of the twentieth century was the best in the world (niemeyer, paulo mendes da rocha, artigas), but today everything has changed, we have some talent, but the commercial architecture is decadent, ugly, poor..
Joe on 22 Jul 2011 at 8:33 pm #
Simple, cool digs, with lots of character.
Gustavo on 22 Jul 2011 at 9:01 pm #
Hi Gustavo, I´m agree, but you have in Brazil very good architects now, I think that this problem with the commercial architecture is anywhere
Rube on 23 Jul 2011 at 1:55 am #
I love this house! I love how its refined and rough at the same time. I love how it fits so perfecty in its context. Great work!
irina o on 23 Jul 2011 at 7:01 am #
love it…feels like a home.Great job!!
Rique on 23 Jul 2011 at 8:12 am #
Who designed that chimney, where could I find it?
Thanks!
marshen on 23 Jul 2011 at 10:12 am #
This is one of the best smaller houses posted here. It has a mid-century, case study feeling to it. Very livable.
Jose on 23 Jul 2011 at 10:13 am #
I’m 16, i don’t know much about building processes or what’s possible or not.. Not yet. But this house really inspires me, and so do the architects from Brazil, so yeah. I love this house and how modern and welcoming it is. It’s been hard finding examples of that, and this is something i’d like to design when i’m older; more knowledgeable.
Virgil Bartram on 23 Jul 2011 at 10:48 am #
I have really enjoyed looking at this house. It has probably the most open floor plan I have ever seen, while incorporating a variety of dynamic spaces. The spaces seem very livable. There are not many photographs of the front entrance. It appears to work very well. The solid wood doors separate the Living Room from the car while the large window opens to the entrance garden.
Great on 23 Jul 2011 at 8:24 pm #
Raw, unpretentious, truly lived-in, modern house.
** Jose, the world needs young blood like you are. Dream big. We’ll look forward to your works in the future. **
Dennis on 25 Jul 2011 at 12:53 am #
incredible! certainly one of the best houses shown on this blog, thanks
CnB on 25 Jul 2011 at 4:36 am #
love it, very brazilian.