Concrete walls frame desert views in remote Chihuahua home by OAX Arquitectos

The earthen tone of this off-grid holiday home in Northern Mexico was selected to match the rock formations of the nearby Cumbres de Majalca National Park, which is known for its dramatic landscapes.

OAX Arquitectos completed this remote home as a vacation getaway for a large family. It is located within a national park in Mexico's Chihuahua State, just south of the American border.

Casa Majalca is covered in earthy-coloured concrete walls

"As part of the development of the park, a section was reserved to house cottages, but because of its remote location lacks services," said OAX Arquitectos, which is based in Monterey.

"The rest of the park is protected from construction, respecting the flora and fauna of the place and promoting outdoor activities, such as camping and hiking."

The facade was made by local artisans

The angular massing of the 300-square-metre home fills the narrow lot, orienting the resident's views towards the best perspectives of the rugged desert landscape and preserving existing trees found on site.

These variations within the facade create pockets of shaded exterior space that the studio filled with local trees and cacti.

OAX Arquitectos wanted the house to blend into its desert environment

"These volumes are integrated into the landscape, like the characteristic stone monoliths of the Majalca National Park," said OAX Arquitectos.

"The color blends in with the land, making reference to the cultural past of the archaeological sites of Paquimé and Casas Grandes."

[

Read:

DUST designs Marfa ADU for isolated desert living in Texas

](https://www.dezeen.com/2021/12/28/dust-marfa-adu-texas-desert-home/)

The home has two bedrooms on its lower floor and two bedrooms upstairs. At the back of the lot, an open-plan kitchen, living and dining room overlooks the park itself, through a tall glass wall that opens onto a covered outdoor kitchen and patio.

The home is essentially off-grid, according to the architects. It generates all of its electricity needs from an array of nine solar panels on the roof, draws its water from a well and from rainwater collection, and is equipped with a septic system to process wastewater.

The house's interiors have a pared-back material finish

Its facade's unique concrete texture was created by local artisans using a variety of formwork board sizes that are meant to appear irregular and natural.

"We bet on a concept of imperfection, that gives it a rustic and brutalist character," said OAX Arquitectos.

This finish is also visible within the resident's living spaces, which the studio complemented with dark wooden furnishings, polished concrete, and black-painted walls.

Two bedrooms are located on the upper floor

The deserts of Chihuahua have inspired the material palette of several architectural projects in Mexico, including a restaurant in Guadalajara, where Monteon Arquitectos Associados designed a ceiling based on the archeological site of Casas Grandes, and a pink concrete skatepark in Ciudad Juárez that was built to revitalise the city's Oriente Park.

The photography is by Paco Álvarez.

Project credits:

Design team: José García Toledo, Fernanda Roiz Silva, Luis Carlos Rodríguez González
Structural engineer: Manuel Jezzini
Energy efficiency: Carlos Estrada Zubía
Interiors: Aileen García

The post Concrete walls frame desert views in remote Chihuahua home by OAX Arquitectos appeared first on Dezeen.

#residential #all #architecture #deserts #houses #solarpower #mexico #holidayhomes #mexicanhouses #colouredconcrete #offgridarchitecture

Concrete walls frame desert views in remote Chihuahua home by OAX Arquitectos

The earthen tone of this off-grid holiday home in Northern Mexico was selected to match the rock formations of the nearby Cumbres de Majalca National Park, which is known for its dramatic landscapes.

Dezeen

Dezeen's top 10 cabins of 2021

Ever have the urge to get away from it all and retreat to a cosy cabin somewhere quiet and remote? In the second roundup of our review of 2021, we pick out 10 of the best cabins on Dezeen this year, including a metal tube in Russia and a house on stilts in the Brazilian forest.

Photo is by ImagenSubliminal

Tini, Spain, by Delavegacanolasso

This small, prefabricated cabin designed by Spanish studio Delavegacanolasso can be ordered online and delivered on the back of a truck.

It comes either off-the-shelf ready for use as an office or customised, with the option to connect multiple units together to form a house.

Find out more about Tini ›

Photo is by Marc Goodwin, Archmospheres

Niliaitta, Finland, by Studio Puisto

Elevated on a single column to minimise the size of its footprint, this striking, black-painted cabin is hidden within woodland near the Salamajärvi National Park in Finland.

Its designer, Studio Puisto, based the structure on the raised wooden huts used by indigenous Samí people to safely store food outdoors known as Niliaitta – though this version features most of the amenities of a modern hotel room.

Find out more about Niliaitta ›

Photo is by Rupert McKelvie

Holly Water Cabin, England, by Out of the Valley

Holly Water Cabin is a holiday home on a farm in Devon dreamed up by architecture studio Out of the Valley.

Constructed from multiple types of timber with a pitched roof and sliding doors opening onto a sheltered veranda, the cabin is intended to immerse guests in nature.

Find out more about Holly Water Cabin ›

Photo is by Cristobal Palma

La Tagua and La Loica, Chile, by Croxatto and Opazo Architects

Like two lookout posts, La Tagua and La Loica are set 80 metres above the Pacific Ocean on a steep hillside in Navidad.

In an attempt to make the cabins blend in with their coastal surroundings, Croxatto and Opazo Architects clad them in reclaimed oak treated with petroleum oils to protect against corrosion from the salty air.

Find out more about La Tagua and La Loica ›

Photo is by Henny van Belkom

Indigo, Netherlands, by Woonpioniers

Amsterdam studio Woonpioniers created this cabin from pre-fabricated laminated timber, with the whole structure's carbon footprint designed to be as small as possible.

The front of the house is dominated by large windows, while inside, the wooden walls curve upwards right to the roof's apex.

Find out more about Indigo ›

Photo is by Ilya Ivanov

Russian Quintessential, Russia, by Sergey Kuznetsov

This remarkable tubular house, balanced on the edge of a slope in Russia's Nikola-Lenivets Art Park, was designed by Moscow's chief architect, Sergey Kuznetsov.

"The idea was to create something with an element of magic," he told Dezeen. Despite being 12 metres long and weighing around twice as much as a fully-grown elephant, the whole thing is held together by just six bolts.

Find out more about Russian Quintessential ›

Photo is by Federico Cairoli

Casa Tejida, Colombia, by Santiago Pradilla

Casa Tejida, which translates as woven house, takes its name from the facade of woven wood screens along the cabin's side filtering light and air.

The house was designed by architect Santiago Pradilla and architecture collective Zuloark as a prototype for more sustainable, local forms of construction.

Find out more about Casa Tejida ›

Photo is by Rasmus Hjortshøj, Coast

The Author's House, Denmark, by Sleth

Built for a writer as a full-time workspace, this copper-clad cabin is nestled in a lakeside forest.

"The area is so lush and beautiful that we wanted to really capture the essence of it, to try to create a seamless transition between the inside and outside," said Søren Leth, a founding partner of Sleth, which designed the house.

Find out more about The Author's House ›

Photo is by Tian Fangfang

The Seeds, China, by ZJJZ Atelier

Wrapped in wooden shingles and mirrored aluminium tiles, The Seeds are a cluster of holiday cabins designed by ZJJZ Atelier for a woodland hotel in China's southeastern Jiangxi province.

Each stilt-raised pod contains a bedroom, bathroom, storage area, attic lounging space and a front terrace.

Find out more about The Seeds ›

Photo is by Rafael Medeiros/Gustavo Uemura

Monkey House, Brazil, by Marko Brajovic

Last but not least, Marko Brajovic's Monkey House was built as an isolated haven during the coronavirus pandemic.

It sits on a forest of slim stilts, a system Brajovic designed after observing how the Juçara palm tree native to the forest uses its roots to anchor its slim stem to the earth.

Find out more about Monkey House ›

The post Dezeen's top 10 cabins of 2021 appeared first on Dezeen.

#2021review #residential #yearlyreviews #all #architecture #cabins #roundups #offgridarchitecture

Dezeen's top 10 cabins of 2021

In the second roundup of our review of 2021, we pick out 10 of the best cabins on Dezeen, including a metal tube in Russia and a house on stilts in Brazil.