
Golf House 3D Model Low-poly 3D model
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Golf House occupies the central position in Costa Esmeralda, a neighborhood 13 kilometers north of Pinamar, a popular seaside resort. Located at its highest point, Golf House is surrounded by a golf course and native vegetation, which creates an intimate atmosphere. The plot of land was originally bounded by a virgin dune that grew steeper as it moved away from the street. The Studio aimed to preserve this natural feature. The commission called for a vacation home that could be occupied throughout the year with minimal maintenance. The brief specified three secondary bedrooms (two sharing an external bathroom and one en-suite) and a master bedroom with its own bathroom, located in a private area connected to a living room and art studio. The couple's quarters should serve as a peaceful retreat, visually linked to nature and with easy access to the outdoors. The Studio proposed a house made entirely of exposed concrete, which complements its surroundings while maintaining a sense of respect for the environment. The architectural strategy involved organizing different functional areas into three distinct volumes set at varying levels. With half of the back buried under the dune, the lower volume houses the entrance lobby and secondary bedrooms. Alongside a storage cube opposite it, this volume supports the prism containing the family's social activities. The master bedroom is located in the third volume, which stands tall to satisfy the client's requirement for privacy. The project aimed to take advantage of the views while preserving the rooms' intimacy, a common challenge in contemporary glazed architecture. The volume housing the social areas is the most visually transparent due to its glass facade and parallel orientation to the street. The social prism occupies the maximum building width and rises to the highest level of the dune at the back of the plot, offering 180-degree views of the golf course and open views of the neighborhood while concealing itself from the street. To enhance the volume's privacy, maritime pines were planted between the building and the road, and vertical sunshades were installed to reduce sunlight incidence. The master bedroom, an independent cannon-shaped volume, captures distant sea horizon views. The social area opens onto a large terrace, while a private extension projects the living room and dining area outwards. Every deck is made of quebracho wood, reducing sun incidence over the rooms they serve. Faced walls less exposed to sunlight (oriented southwest) feature an interior coating of kiri wood for thermal insulation. This same material was used on partitions supporting bed backrests, softening the rough concrete in private areas. In addition to passive solar control provided by the house's design, Split air conditioners and radiating floors were installed to allow Golf House to be occupied year-round as requested by the commissioner. The prisms' arrangement aims to structure the house as a lookout-artifact composed of volumes centered around an axis: vertical circulation. The scope of their overlap and partially underground entrance lobby was to lower the building's height and moderate its visual impact. Large spans and overhangs were made possible through the use of reinforced concrete's structural properties. Location: Costa Esmeralda, Buenos Aires Architect: Luciano Kruk Project Management: Ekaterina Künzel Construction Site Management: Pablo Magdalena Collaborators: Josefina Perez Silva, Andrés Conde Blanco, Federico Eichenberg, Dan Saragusti, Isabelle Ducrest
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