Photos © Ensambl,e Studio
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Spanish
architects Débora Mesa and Antón García-Abril have built a prefab prototype as
their Boston home. It's the subject of my latest article in the April-May issue of
Mark magazine (Holland).
Here are
some excerpts from the text (article not available online):
"The Cyclopean House is a live-work loft,
built over a former garage in Brookline, Massachusetts, where the Spanish
architects Débora Mesa and Antón García-Abril live with their three children.
The house is also the first completed prototype for a novel system of
prefabrication that the couple is developing at the POPLab, which they founded
at MIT in 2013, and in their architectural practice known as Ensamble Studio."
"The key to the system is the use of
large sections of expanded, high-density polystyrene foam, popularly known as
Styrofoam, which is the core of prefab elements…. The architects shape the foam
into beams with different profiles, including Is, Ls and Cs. They reinforce it
with an exoskeleton of galvanized steel studs, and finish it with a double
layer of 6mm cement board."
"The experiment is driven by their
interest in developing an "ultra-light" prefab system that,
"without adding mass, provides tectonic qualities of solidity and
firmness," Antón explains."
"The galvanized steel framing on the
interior reads in many ways like conventional wood trim, recalling Japanese
paneled interiors, as Antón points out, or perhaps the Prairie Houses of Frank
Lloyd Wright…. These references are coherent with the essential concept of the
prefab units, which use modern versions of the materials of traditional
American balloon-frame construction."
"Antón considers their system a hybrid
between American and European building concepts, between the balloon frame and
the solid wall. "Compare houses by Richard Meier and Eduardo Souto de
Moura," he says. "There's a difference in weight. European
construction is about the continuum, solidity, firmitas. We've put together
these two traditions, to try to get the best of both. Prefabricating, but not
in little pieces. Light but not thin. Solid and thick, building walls, not
frames." "
Case Studt in Prefab
Mark, April - May 2017, p. 152 - 159
More pictures and plans:
Divisaire Journal, July 29, 2016
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