This Monolithic Concrete House Appears to Float Among the Trees
Located outside of Buenos Aires, the house rises above the forest floor on a single concrete pedestal.
Casa en los Arboles is, as the name suggests, a house in the trees. Built on a sloping, secluded site in the Argentine countryside, the home is a unique weekend retreat for a nature-loving couple from the city of Buenos Aires. From the beginning, says architect Luciano Kruk, the couple was interested in an elevated structure that would afford views of the ocean and treetops without sacrificing the feeling that the home was nestled in the woods.
The pool is lifted up from the forest floor to the level of the home on a single concrete fin.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
The exposed concrete of Casa Arboles is a neutral shade of gray. The architect hopes the material will weather over time to blend in with the landscape.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
Because of the home’s intended purpose as a second house, Kruk designed it as a secluded retreat—a place to get away from it all. "A getaway home should guarantee disconnection," he explains. "For this, it must concede a place to enjoy the landscape in which is implanted and embrace its energy. At the same time, it should be practical, functional, and most importantly, easy to maintain."
The entire structure rests on a single, central support.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
Kruk wanted the house to have as little physical impact on the landscape as possible. He started by designing a compact house—but then went a step further, lifting the home from the ground and minimizing its footprint. "As the house is an object inserted into this rich landscape, the intention was for it to have a minimum impact on the surrounding land," he says.
The home’s interior is minimal and streamlined, with classic modern furnishings and polished concrete floors.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
Shop the Look
Lyon Béton Dice - L Storage Module
Simply the peak of versatility. As a standalone piece, the Dice - L Storage Module by Lyon Béton adapts to numerous roles, from coffee table to storage accessory to display stand. Unlock its true potential by joining it to matching pieces using the available rubber connectors, creating all kinds of bespoke furniture designs from consoles to shelving to custom room dividers and more. Inspired by modernist movements and post-modern material manufacturing techniques, Lyon Béton creates elegant and functional furniture and furnishings from an unusual medium—concrete. Each piece is handcrafted and expertly finished to preserve the natural quirks of the material, elevating the designs with warmth, function and individuality.
ShopKnoll Barcelona Chair
When Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was chosen to create the furnishings for the German Pavilion at the 1929 International Exhibition in Barcelona, he designed an iconic chair that many may not realize was born with royal roots. He built the Barcelona Chair to serve as seating for the king and queen of Spain, while he also designed a stool for the attendees to rest on. He formed an angular, tufted cushion that comes from a single cowhide—either Spinneybeck® or Edelman Leather. The support is made of cowhide belting straps that are dyed to match the color of the chair. In order to create such precise tufting, 40 leather panels are cut individually and are both hand-welted and hand-tufted with leather buttons. In 1953, Mies van der Rohe officially granted the production rights to Florence Knoll, who was a close friend during their time at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Today, Knoll continues to produce the chair in the U.S.A. to the exact specifications of the original design. Photo Courtesy of Knoll
ShopOluce Atollo Glass Table Lamp
The opal glass Atollo table lamp, is truly a work of art. The top section contains two lamps and the base cylinder a separate lamp. Available in three sizes. Master designer Giuseppe Ostuni founded Italy-based lighting brand Oluce in 1945. Now the oldest Italian design company still in existence and actively producing today, many of Oluce's domed lights are now on permanent display at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Ostuni's award-winning and dramatically arced floor lamps, domed table lamps and pendants, glass scones, and uniquely-shaped outdoor lighting have influenced the lighting and design industry for decades and will continue to do so for generations to come. Photo Courtesy of YLighting
ShopThe resulting design rests upon a single central pillar. The two upper floors expand out around the central column, giving the home the appearance of an inverted ziggurat. Heavily reinforced concrete slabs are cantilevered off the main support by up to nine feet. Inside, the poured concrete is left exposed, and the stripes and impressions left behind by wooden forms provide a subtle visual reference to the trees that are the home’s namesake.
The house’s small size and compact footprint necessitated some clever spatial arrangements—like the hidden kitchen—to make the space feel bigger.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
Wraparound windows on all sides of the first floor provide immersive views of the surrounding woods, making the minimal interior feel like a home carved out of the landscape itself. The logic here, according to Kruk, was to make the windows a part of the structure of the house.
A swimming pool extends from the edge of the elevated terrace.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
"The window placement was conceptualized as a series of elements that crystallizes and continues the morphology that the concrete elements form, completing the object. The color was chosen for the same purpose—the carpentry lines shouldn’t take any attention, so as not to be perceived as isolated elements, merging with the concrete structure tones."
Poured concrete was the perfect material for such an intensely geometric design.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
Perhaps the house’s most striking feature is its swimming pool. Shaped like an enormous concrete sarcophagus filled with blue water, it’s lifted up from the forest floor to the level of the home on a single concrete fin. Viewed from the house, the effect is of an infinity pool extending from the glassed-in living room into the surrounding forest.
The house's elevation brings it into the canopy of the surrounding trees.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
An appealingly geometric concrete staircase floats towards the home’s second floor. Attached only to one wall, it’s unencumbered by handrails or support from below. On the second floor, privacy plays a greater role—and it’s apparent from looking at the house’s exterior. At this level the windows face only one direction, toward the sea, and a concrete overhang shades them from the sun like a visor.
The home’s interior is quite minimal and makes extensive use of large windows to let in sunlight and views.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
From outside, the home appears to hover amid a copse of small trees, and the exposed concrete looks pale amid the forest’s earth tones. As time passes, the trees continue to grow, and the cement begins to weather, Kruk hopes that the home and its landscape will become further entwined. "Harmonizing with the surrounding forest through its color and texture, this artificial stone coexists with its surroundings—a condition that will increase with the passing of the years," he tells Dwell.
A sparse bedroom on the home’s second floor.
Photo by Daniela Mac Adden
Related Reading:
This Mexico City Home Features a Garden at Every Level
23 Beautifully Textured Board-Formed Concrete Homes
Project Credits:
Architect of Record: Luciano Kruk Arquitectos / @lucianokruk.arquitectos
Published
Last Updated