Gonzalo Bardach tops Argentinian forest retreat with garden roof

Local studio Gonzalo Bardach Arquitectura has created a concrete woodland house with a ramping green roof near the coast outside Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Located in a coniferous forest in Costa Esmeralda, the 282-square metre (3,035-square foot) Forest House is set into a dune, using the uneven topography to create a shelter with voids and framed views that create a connection between the interior and exterior spaces.

Gonzalo Bardach Arquitectura has completed a woodland house near Buenos Aires

The 2023 design works to harmonize architecture and landscape by placing large voids filled with glass in the front and the back of the house, looking out, that allow residents to feel like they are surrounded by the trees.

At certain points in the perimeter, in circulation areas, the house is almost completely buried, and the space between the hills created by the structure are crossed by glass enclosures, furthing the experience of immersion.

The house is set into a dune and covered by a green roof

The single-storey sleeping and service spaces are located in three linear pavilions partially buried in the dune and lined with extruding walls of board-formed concrete. Be

The ground slopes up to form a green roof, which also bridges the pavilions over a large central space that holds the kitchen, dining, and living rooms.

The green roof slopes upwards to cover the building

Light filters in through floor-to-ceiling glass walls and from the side of the house where the living room transitions to a small side gallery.

Over 50 square metres (560 square feet) of covered porch space is distributed across the plan with a large outdoor living area that heads out to the rectangular pool and a small awning off each bedroom that is created by the angled terminus of the stone walls.

A central living area sits next to an outdoor pool

“The architectural path in the Forest House is the main axis of the whole design, for which every sequence and space has been thought through,” said said Gonzalo Bardach Arquitectura founder Gonzalo Bardach.

“It is a clear example of how to take into account not only morphology and program needs, but also the impact on the environment.”

Selected for minimal life cycle maintenance and ability to integrate with the environment, the interior material palette includes liquid stone, wood, iron and glass.

Liquid stone, iron, glass and wood were used on the interior

“The liquid stone emerges as the distinctive and expressive element of the project, adapting to the terrain topography and enabling an effortless relationship between the architecture and the surrounding landscape,” the studio said.

“The work is materially integrated into the environment, and this connection generates a sense of rootedness and refuge in the middle of the forest.”


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The materials allow the building to become a “living canvas” for sunlight filtering through the tree canopy, creating shadow patterns.

“In this refuge in the middle of the forest, sunlight becomes a dynamic element that constantly transforms the perception of the space, inviting us to experience a deeper connection with nature and with ourselves,” the team said.

Native Buenos Aires plant species cover the roof

Stemming from botanical research of native Buenos Aires species, the garden roof promotes cross-species support and a more organic, less-controlled approach to maintenance. The biodiversity and adaptability allow the garden to develop its own rhythm.

Other projects recently designed in the forests of South America include a prefabricated house with a green roof in Brazil by MAPA and Minimod and a stilted glass house in Chile by Aguilo + Pedraza.

The photography is by César Béjar.

Project credits:

Architecture studio: Gonzalo Bardach Arquitectura
Architect: Gonzalo Bardach
Design team: Gonzalo Bardach, Martín Macca, Manuel Enriquez.
Landscape design: Gonzalo Bardach
Interior design: Gonzalo Bardach
Structural design: VH, Julián Venturini

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