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Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos

Project: Monte Elbruz Building
Author: Garduño Arquitectos
Juan Garduño, Ernesto Flores, Ricardo Guzmán, Daniel Banda
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
Use: Multifamily House
Site Area: 1,300 sq mt
Bldg Area: 6,300 sq mt
Bldg Coverage Ratio: 70%
Gross Floor Ratio: 30%
Structural Design: Diseño y Supervision S.C.
Electrical Engineer: Arturo Guerra
Design Period: 2007
Completion Period: 2008
Photography: Sófocles Hernández
Paul Czitrom

Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos

The lot was located in a difficult area, originally classified as high-density and was already fully developed, adjoining buildings 14 to 30 stories high. The regulations were later changed and, when the project was being designed, the limitation considered a maximum of six levels plus a roof garden.

Given the density requirements—24 units, 164 sq. meters, a 1,300 sq. meter surface and 30 meter long front—designing a linear façade would lead to 60 per cent of the apartments having interior view. Taking these variables into account, we opted for designing two side blocks within a 60 cm. distance of the borders, thus generating a central courtyard to play the role of green area, access and lighting center, but that would also generate facades proportioned in terms of the project’s scale.

Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos

This program succeeded in providing 66 per cent of the units with a green area. The first eight with a private garden and the last eight with a roof garden. In addition, all apartments are two-leveled.

The street access becomes a stroll past a reflecting pool and gardens, employing 90 per cent of the permeable space as green area. In addition, the project includes a rain water recycling system for irrigation and car washing.

The individual program consists of 164 sq. meters, with two bedrooms, 3 and a half bathrooms, studio, dining-living room, kitchen, and service quarters, all surrounding an interior, six meter-high hall/family room. The program is completed by a common area, with gym and swimming pool at the basement 1 level.

Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos

The front façade boasts two slim vertical concrete sand-colored beams separated by the volume containing the home. These pieces were cast with a double concrete face and marble grain. They were later finished with a marteline, bringing out a tree that begins with the trunk at the level of the first beam and continues the trace in the second one. These beams, that seem to float from the façade, become a parapet present throughout the building’s perimeter and returning to the front under the form of a slab.

One of the main goals of this proposal is to generate the illusion of slimmer volumes, avoid noise and incorporate and proportion the project with its environment in a positive fashion.

Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos

The inner façade was designed as a city within a city, striving to achieve the residents’ movement and interaction by means of exposed circulations and aluminum panels containing glass frames and tilting vents. In order to achieve privacy when walking past each unit, we elevated the ground levels of each apartment by 90 cm. with regard to the hallways and added a 70 cm. interior parapet, which prevents any direct visual contact from the access hallway. This was achieved by creating independent stairs that reach each apartment.

Once having achieved proportioned inner views, our next task consisted in covering the adjoining facades with metal sheets since all three border the parking area practically throughout all their height.

At the back of the building we designed a vertical opening in the elevator cube, covering it with an image of the sky that is part of a story in which a group of children invent a flying umbrella.

Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos

Umbrella Story
A couple of buddies and I found this old broken umbrella at the flying site one day. The wind was not blowing very hard so we couldn’t fly. We were bored stiff, so we decided to see if we could make it fly. We scrounged around and found a piece of cardboard for a rudder, then taped a chunk of asphalt on the handle for balast. We actually got some pretty good flights out of it. Basically just held it out over the edge of the cliff in the lift and gave it a light push. It would climb and finally get blown back into the rotor, but a couple of the better flights were around 30-40 seconds.

“Aline Shkurovich”

Monte Elbruz - Garduño Arquitectos


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