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Architects Collective & at.103
Ozuluama Residence

Mexico City, Mexico

The new roof top appears like a nomadic structure floating above the diverse urban topography of Mexico City.


Photo: Wolfgang Thale

The Ozuluama Residence is located in the Condesa district in the heart of Mexico City. Created at the beginning of the 20th century around what was once a racetrack, the area is today a unique and vibrant neighborhood with a array of different styles, including a couple of projects by Luis Barragán, several modernist buildings and some contemporary architecture, including the polyhedral home of architect Juan José Díaz Infante.

The project consists of a penthouse with two terraces and a lookout, on top of an existing 3-story building. The owners inhabit the penthouse six months of the year, the rest of the time it is used by friends, visitors and artists that stay in the city.


Photo: Wolfgang Thale

The structure was designed to reflect the movements of its transient inhabitants in an origami-like morphology. The folding dynamic form creates a seemingly temporary habitat with continuous inside and outside spaces on two levels and generous views of the city.


Photo: Wolfgang Thale


Photo: Wolfgang Thale


Photo: Wolfgang Thale

The building’s skeleton is made of steel and is completely enveloped in pearl-grey acrylic-polymer Corian panels, the first time this material was used as an entire building envelope. Overhangs and the thoughtful orientation of interior spaces and openings moderate the climate of the penthouse, which can also be adjusted by providing cross ventilation through operable windows in the glass facade and at the highest point of the roof construction.


Photo: Wolfgang Thale


Photo: Wolfgang Thale


Photo: Wolfgang Thale

A bright pink patio in the middle of the roof brings warmth and soft light into the apartment.
The pink patio (cubo de luz) is reminiscent of the exterior color the old building used to have when it was a bakery.


Photo: Wolfgang Thale


Photo: Wolfgang Thale

The floors covering the entire penthouse - from the moment you enter, to the moment you step into the bathtub - are of Santo Tomas marble, a local stone usually employed as flooring in the city’s subway stations, churches and other public spaces.

Thus the echoes of the outside are folded quietly into a private space, further reinforcing the notion of a transient, temporal habitat.


Drawing courtesy Architects Collective
Floor Plan


Drawing courtesy Architects Collective
Upper Floor Plan


Drawing courtesy Architects Collective
East Section


Drawing courtesy Architects Collective
North Section

Site area: 150 square meters
Gross floor area: 125 square meters

completed: 2008

Client: Lazaro & Yoshua Okon
Architects: Architects Collective & at.103
Kurt Sattler
Julio Amezcua
Francisco Pardo

Structural consultant Colinas de Buen
Facade consultant Vilcre
Contractor: Factor Eficiencia

May 18, 2009