This is a distinctive house conceived by HW Studio, a practice led by Rogelio Vallejo Bores. The project is a house for its own author, located in the city of Morelia, in the state of Michoacán, in central Mexico.

A house that confronts its author—the one who will inhabit it—and seeks to remain consistent with the words and ideas he has articulated over the years when responding to clients and to the dreams of others.

With a limited budget, the proposal developed by HW Studio, although economically constrained, was ultimately shaped by the author’s path toward Zen, the Dharma, and Japan. Seen from the outside, it appears as nothing more than a simple, silent, enclosed box.

However, upon crossing the threshold, the construction does not confine but rather contains; it is not hermetic, but instead protects delicate spaces like a stone garden. The house unfolds as a sequence of perceptions, of subtle transitions, in which the garden becomes the center around which everything is organized and connected to nature, avoiding servant spaces. All spaces take on a leading role, with separations that are in fact only filters of light, shadow, and space.

The bedroom is located on the upper floor, and the views are carefully framed glimpses of nature from within the house. The resulting whole is a house meant to be lived in, rather than a piece of exhibition scenography.

Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Cesar Bejar.

Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Cesar Bejar.

Project description by HW Studio

The Architect House 
The Japanese believe that the soul of a house does not lie in its walls, nor in its roof, but in the void it contains. “The void is absolutely powerful because it can contain everything,” wrote Kakuzo Okakura. It allows us to breathe, to move, to think, to live. That was, from the beginning, the deepest idea of this house: that its center would not be an object, but rather an empty present.

This is my house. The architect’s house—the one accustomed to giving form to other people’s dreams—faces here a much barer question: how to build a life that is coherent with the words one has spoken for years?

With a limited budget, the decisions were less aesthetic than vital. Every coin had to speak with clarity; every centimeter had to make sense. But beyond economic constraints, it was my long and slow path toward Zen, toward the Dharma, and toward Japan, that truly shaped it.

Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Cesar Bejar.
Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Cesar Bejar.

From the outside, the house seems like nothing more than a box—like the ones I’ve been making throughout my career. Quiet. Closed. Like a stone in the urban landscape. However, upon crossing the threshold, one understands that this box does not enclose, but holds. What appears hermetic actually protects something delicate: a stone garden that is not touched, but touches everything.

As in the temples of Kyoto, the stones are carefully arranged, not to represent something, but to evoke a sensation—perhaps even a feeling. Upon this bed of grey gravel float two wooden platforms, as in that temple. They are not floor: they are pause. Spaces for stopping, for looking, for simply being. The garden does not decorate: it organizes. It is the heart around which the spaces are ordered like satellites orbiting stillness.

Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Cesar Bejar.
Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Cesar Bejar.

On one side, the kitchen and dining area, with double height. Above it, a volume that gathers the smoke from the fire, thinking not only of nostalgia, but of the real possibility that, one day, the city may no longer provide what we need. On the other side, the living room: a space for contemplation, where large stones rest like islands in a quiet sea. There is no covered hallway between both spaces. To go from the living room to the dining area—if it’s raining—you get wet... or you wait for the rain to stop. Architecture here does not protect from the world: it reconciles you with it.

The shōji doors, made with rice paper, are not an aesthetic concession. They are the true filter between inside and out. Light, as it passes through them, softens until it becomes time. The day doesn’t rush in—it reclines. Shadow is not the absence of light, but its most delicate form.

Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Gustavo Quiroz.
Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Gustavo Quiroz.

Finally, the bedroom, placed above, is a minimal, intimate space. A single circular window opens to the foliage of a tree planted at the center of the garden. It is an eye that contemplates.

The program is austere. There are no unnecessary hallways or grand gestures. The house is almost entirely devoid of glass. Only three small windows open to what is truly worth seeing: a mountain, a neighboring pine, the tree that lives at the center. Everything else is contained, inward-looking—like a sound box that keeps its own music secret.

The entrance, instead of ascending, descends. One enters by going down, like someone bowing before something sacred. The staircase reaches the place where the stone offered stability, avoiding unnecessary costs in foundation. But it is also a spiritual gesture: to inhabit this house, one must leave a certain pride at the door, and enter with humility—like someone passing through the torii of an invisible shrine.

Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Gustavo Quiroz.
Kehai House by HW Studio. Photograph by Gustavo Quiroz.

In Japan, what is valued is the imperfect, the incomplete, the ephemeral. Beauty is not what shines eternally, but what is about to disappear. This house was not made to impress. It was made to endure in silence; to bear the light weight of an honest life.

More information

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Architects
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HW Studio. Lead Architect.- Rogelio Vallejo Bores.

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Project team
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Oscar Didier Ascencio Castro, Nik Zaret Cervantes Ordaz.

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Collaborators
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Structural Engineer.- Abdiel Núñez Gaona.

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Builder
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Alberto Gallegos Negrete (Grupo GAPSE).

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Area
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95 sqm.

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Dates
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2025.

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Location
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Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico.

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Budget
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$82,000 

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Photography
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HW-Studio is an architecture practice formed by Rogelio Vallejo Bores, Oscar Didier Asencio Castrocreado, Vera Sánchez Macouzet, Tirso Figueroa, Sergio A. Garcia Padilla and Jesús Alejandro López Hernández, founded in 2010 in Morelia city, Mexico, within the booming of violence of the country. 

The Studio was created with the purpose to stimulate and get implicated in the architectural process with artistic principles and eastern (budist) philosophy with western concepts, in order to create spaces that reminds and promotes that threatened peace.

Meditation is part of their creative process, becoming the natural and obvious answer for the creation of spaces that can transmit a serenity sensation, tranquility and silence, in a world mostly noisy and violent.

They constantly seek to promote an appreciation of what is really important in life, eliminating from architecture, everything that is not essential, so that through conscious contemplation, states of inner peace are reached.

The name: HW-Studio, comes from the union of the H letter, which in spanish is considered the silent letter and it means the representation of silence. The W letter comes from the Japanese concept wabisabi, which has no Spanish translation or direct equivalence with western concepts, but it could be understood as beauty of the impermanent and the imperfect.
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Published on: April 19, 2026
Cite:
metalocus, AGUSTINA BERTA
"The imperfect, the incomplete, the ephemeral. Kehai House by HW Studio" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/imperfect-incomplete-ephemeral-kehai-house-hw-studio> ISSN 1139-6415
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