Llano Apartment is a project designed by Archetonic. For this project, an apartment in Mexico City, we established premises that guided the entirety of the design development. We sought to enhance amplitude and take advantage of the double height, insert maximum natural light and permeate the interior with the exterior environment through large windows. Photography by Arturo Arrieta.
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The layout is structured by a central corridor that connects all areas. The design invites you to decipher light and space, volume and void. The limits are composed by the duality between the absence and presence of half-height bodies that generate attics and the possibility of using another plane of the apartment. The half-height volumes allow for the contemplation of the exterior given that they don’t block the windows and permit the uninterrupted entry of natural light. Likewise, mirrors as ceilings in the boundaries of the apartment duplicate the surrounding exterior nature to permeate the interior.
We always procure flexibility for function and space. A wooden screen privatizes or exposes half the height of a room in order to use the space in a flexible manner before its used as a bedroom when the family grows. Tall sliding doors grant different readings of some spaces, changing the perception and use depending on their opening or confinement. We explore the opportunity to unify areas that are commonly divided by walls, like the bedroom and family room, the dressing room and bedroom, the kitchen and living room.
We were careful that artificial lighting didn’t interfere with the protagonism of natural light. We avoided the use of “spots” and opted for long strips of lighting that follow the geometry and boundaries of the spaces, thus putting light and form in dialogue.
We sought maximum synthesis in the materials and tonalities used to obtain a compelling and pure space in which materiality, light and nature were the protagonists.