Showing posts with label Casa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Casa. Show all posts

Friday, June 13, 2014

Multi Container Home Casa Container Danilo Corbas São Paulo Brazil

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Multi Container Home - Casa Container, Danilo Corbas, - São Paulo, Brazil,

Architect Danilo Corbas

About the project:
New concept in global construction, the use of containers is the basis of a sustainable residential design and high standards in construction in the city of São Paulo. Unprecedented in Brazil, Casa Sustainable Container has attracted the interest of large companies and industry professionals.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/pliniodon/sets/72157625967379850/detail/

Projeto Casa Container - Arquiteto Danilo Corbas


Arq. Danilo Corbas

Conheça o projeto:
Novo conceito mundial em construção civil, o uso de contêineres é a base de um projeto residencial sustentável e de alto padrão, em construção na cidade de São Paulo. Inédito no Brasil, a Casa Container Sustentável tem atraído o interesse de grandes empresas e profissionais do setor.
Find Shipping Container Homes, 20 ft container, 40 ft container, ISBU in your area













Sunday, February 23, 2014

Casa Manifesto Recycled shipping container house Chile

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Bioclimatic design, recycling, reuse, reduction of building materials; clean and renewable energy use. All these concepts converge in the Casa Manifesto - recycled shipping container house designed by James & Mau and built by Infiniski.

The structure consists of the three shipping containers, combined with other materials such as wood, recycled aluminum and others. The construction is based on a modular prefabricated design, which allows to limit transport costs and pollution on site. This system suggests the complete realization of the house design, integrating possible extensions - fast and consistent, in case the client's space needs will change over time.

Design: James & Mau, Infiniski
Area: 160 m2
Year: 2009
Execution Time: 90 days
Total Cost: 79.000 €
Location: Curacavi, Chile
Photography: Antonio Corcuera


In this case, the result is an inner area 160 m2 divided into two floors. The ground floor is occupied by a large common area, which includes living room, kitchen, bedroom, bathroom and terraces. The master bedroom with bath, living room, two rooms with shared bathrooms and terraces form the area of the second floor.

Its location, on top of a hill dominating the landscape, generating a permeability in its east-west axis. Through a large glass area, the sensation of being in the most social area of the house is to be under a big bridge in the middle of nowhere.

The house is spread around this great common space with volumes much more closed in the north-south axis. At the same time intentionally, the construction system of the house is covered with skin, playing through its horizontal elements, generates a wealth of light and shade that helps to dematerialize the volumes. The house, with its materials, it becomes a living architectural object.

The shape of the house itself responds to a bioclimatic design to suit the climat conditions of the place. So, the house "dresses" in summer and "undressing" winter sun through facades and roof skin. To achieve this architects used two types of skin: one based on fixed horizontal wood slats and other mobile pallet, which can be opened individually to control solar radiation. It also serves as ingenious aesthetic finish to help integrate it into its rural surroundings.

The inner enclosure is formed by recycled cellulose insulation projected onto the sheet inside the container and ecological finished panels of gypsum and cellulose fiber. With these elements of passive thermal insulation, and the incorporation of alternative energy technology (solar thermal panels) the recycled shipping container house achieves 70% energy independence.



















Architect's contacts

Address in Spain Glorieta de Bilbao 1, 2°C, 28004, Madrid
Phone in Spain +34.91.3295953

Address in Chile Teresa Salas 786, Loft 3, Providencia, Santiago
Phone in Chile +56 (2) 27610061

Address in Colombia Calle 104 # 19A-25 Of. 504, Bogotá D.C.
Phone in Colombia +57.3007904742

Email info@jamesandmau.com
Website http://www.jamesandmau.com


Friday, August 16, 2013

Bright Cargo Container Casa in Chile By Preston

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Bright Cargo Container Casa in Chile

This bright orange home was made with two 40-foot and three 20-foot shipping containers in Santiago, Chile.  Due to our publication of various shipping container homes, the architect, Rubén Rivera Peede, shared Liray House with Jetson Green recently, and you’ll find more vibrant photos and a floor plan below.
As background, the owners wanted an earthquake-resistant home at an affordable price, and Peede was able to deliver a design to suit those needs using the container units as the structure.  Proyecto ARQtainer built Liray House in three months for about $75,000 USD.
The three short containers have the living room and kitchen, while the two long containers have the bedrooms and bathrooms.  The home was raised off the ground and plumbing was placed in the crawl space.
Original container flooring was removed and replaced with hardwood flooring.  Existing container doors were used to structure the balconies.  The builder installed energy-efficient windows, insulated the walls and ceiling with spray-applied cellulose to avoid thermal and acoustic bridges, and then finished the interior with drywall.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Casa Manifesto Recycled shipping container house Chile

0 comments


Bioclimatic design, recycling, reuse, reduction of building materials; clean and renewable energy use. All these concepts converge in the Casa Manifesto - recycled shipping container house designed by James & Mau and built by Infiniski.

The structure consists of the three shipping containers, combined with other materials such as wood, recycled aluminum and others. The construction is based on a modular prefabricated design, which allows to limit transport costs and pollution on site. This system suggests the complete realization of the house design, integrating possible extensions - fast and consistent, in case the client's space needs will change over time.

Design: James & Mau, Infiniski
Area: 160 m2
Year: 2009
Execution Time: 90 days
Total Cost: 79.000 €
Location: Curacavi, Chile
Photography: Antonio Corcuera


In this case, the result is an inner area 160 m2 divided into two floors. The ground floor is occupied by a large common area, which includes living room, kitchen, bedroom, bathroom and terraces. The master bedroom with bath, living room, two rooms with shared bathrooms and terraces form the area of the second floor.

Its location, on top of a hill dominating the landscape, generating a permeability in its east-west axis. Through a large glass area, the sensation of being in the most social area of the house is to be under a big bridge in the middle of nowhere.

The house is spread around this great common space with volumes much more closed in the north-south axis. At the same time intentionally, the construction system of the house is covered with skin, playing through its horizontal elements, generates a wealth of light and shade that helps to dematerialize the volumes. The house, with its materials, it becomes a living architectural object.

The shape of the house itself responds to a bioclimatic design to suit the climat conditions of the place. So, the house "dresses" in summer and "undressing" winter sun through facades and roof skin. To achieve this architects used two types of skin: one based on fixed horizontal wood slats and other mobile pallet, which can be opened individually to control solar radiation. It also serves as ingenious aesthetic finish to help integrate it into its rural surroundings.

The inner enclosure is formed by recycled cellulose insulation projected onto the sheet inside the container and ecological finished panels of gypsum and cellulose fiber. With these elements of passive thermal insulation, and the incorporation of alternative energy technology (solar thermal panels) the recycled shipping container house achieves 70% energy independence.



















Architect's contacts

Address in Spain Glorieta de Bilbao 1, 2°C, 28004, Madrid
Phone in Spain +34.91.3295953

Address in Chile Teresa Salas 786, Loft 3, Providencia, Santiago
Phone in Chile +56 (2) 27610061

Address in Colombia Calle 104 # 19A-25 Of. 504, Bogotá D.C.
Phone in Colombia +57.3007904742

Email info@jamesandmau.com
Website http://www.jamesandmau.com


 
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