Las Rocas is a set of four houses designed by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Located on land bordering a protected nature reserve in the northern part of Peña de Valle de Bravo, in the State of Mexico, the site consists of a very rocky and lushly vegetated cliff area whose origin dates back to pre-Hispanic times.

The houses are approached from an environmental point of view and from an awareness of the nature reserve located next to them, resulting in a project of respect, regeneration and integration that seeks minimal impact on the existing land by building a silent space that always lets the context occupy the foreground.

The architecture studio Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos starts from the analysis of a dynamic system of spaces that would allow for the generation of different configurations between them with which to obtain interesting compositions that are formally appropriate to each location, resulting in four homes from the same modules and repeated volumes whose geometric play allows them to respond to exact situations that allow them to connect architecture and landscape.

Through a dynamic program and a complex but harmonious material language based on stucco, stone and glass, they manage to reach a final path that links architecture with its context, with nature as the guiding axis, which reflects, from formal tools that provide the volume with simplicity and lightness, discrete spaces that are nourished by the light and surrounding vegetation that blur the boundaries between the built and the place.

Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque

Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque.

Project description by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos

Las Rocas is a complex of four houses in the northern part of Valle de Bravo known as La Peña, an elevated terrain of outcrops and endemic vegetation.

The 6,400 sqm site was treated as an extension of the adjacent natural reserve, and the project seeks to respect and regenerate this environment.

A detailed and accurate site analysis was essential to determine where to position each of the houses for minimal impact on the preexisting runoffs, rocks, and vegetation.

A narrow cobbled road leads to the complex’s central service area that contains a car park, storerooms, as well as key installations such as cisterns, machine rooms, and treatment plants. Users are required to leave their vehicles here and walk to the houses via paths, steps, and small plazas, immediately freeing them from the urban surroundings.

Las Rocas por Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Fotografía por Onnis Luque --- Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque
Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque.

The project evolved from the study of the program: the idea was to create a dynamic system, generating different configurations to optimize compositions for each location. As a result, the four houses use the same modules and components but with unique layouts depending on their respective characteristics. The volumes are freely arranged in six directions (front, rear, above, below, left, right) in response to their specific situations. This simple and dynamic system blends the architecture into its natural context. These volumes do not touch each other; their separation creates voids, views, natural light and ventilation to integrate them adequately within the site. In Las Rocas, a bathroom can be a stone, a tree a part of the roof, and the terrain itself a walkway or set of steps: nature defines the design.

As with many of our projects, the modules were designed separately in the studio and then mapped out on site to define their ideal location. Once positioned, we added the furnishings, imagining the placement of doors and windows before connecting them to the corridor, a linear axis that acts as a horizontal and vertical circulation, with dimensions, measurements, and levels all depending on the location of each volume within the program. These circulation routes adapt the architecture to the site and not vice-versa.

Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque
Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque.

The contrast between the closed volumes and the openness of the corridors is designed to stimulate different sensations when inhabiting these spaces: the enclosure of the sleeping area contrasts with the open circulation routes that relate directly to the local vegetation and rocky landscape. Apart from linking the different areas, the corridor captures southern light and local heat to regulate the houses’ temperature thanks to the shadows thrown by the outcrops and the north-facing orientation of the residences.

The living and dining rooms have a corner window created by a 5 x 10 meter cantilever, opening up the space and directly joining the interior to the exterior. This design avoids duplicating areas—a common issue in rural retreats in Valle de Bravo—to ensure these rooms are fully used and become core elements of the program.

The kitchen is located in the same space as the dining room and living room, and in some cases it can be joined to these spaces with a sliding partition. The terraces were the last piece of the jigsaw: they were plotted on the site to adapt their dimensions to the possibilities of the context and for the landscape to form part of the project, blurring the boundary between construction and the surroundings.

Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque
Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Photograph by Onnis Luque.

The light-gray stucco finish for Las Rocas matches the predominant hue of the surrounding rocks. Only two other materials complement the project: textured stone flooring and glass, which is always flush with the exterior façades, matches the walls’ smooth texture, in stark contrast to the surroundings, reflecting the surroundings and merging the house within its context. This color scheme allows a discreet and simple architecture: the composition of the solid volumes creates a sense of lightness; vegetation and nature are kept as the main element. The houses stand out for their simplicity, creating a quiet built space to bring the context to the fore.

Ana Paula de Alba’s custom interior designs for each house responds to the families’ specific needs, giving every space a unique character. Each home has its own essence, the result of the synergy between user, architecture, and context.

More information

Label
Architects
Text

Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos. Lead Architect.- Ignacio Urquiza Seoane.

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Project team
Text

Michela Lostia, Ana Laura Ochoa, Anet Carmona.

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Collaborators
Text

Interior Design Team.-    Sacha Bourgarel, Ana Paula De Alba.

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Area
Text

3,200 sqm.

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Dates
Text

2022.

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Location
Text

Valle de Bravo, State of Mexico, Mexico.

+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Photography
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
The Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos studio is made up of a team of architects and designers; They develop projects of different scales and typologies based on research, experimentation, and critical analysis. They employ three main elements in their design process: drawing, image, and text.

As architects, they prioritize drawing by hand. They transmit ideas, proposals, and solutions through drawings, which when interpreted by different people can materialize in architectural works. Their interest in drawing is dedicated and meticulous: with it, they seek to express the spatial relationships that they explore with each project and their relationship with the user.

Images are fundamental tools throughout their design process, they use the image as a reference and inspiration, as a means of exploring what they have investigated, and as a record of the development of their ideas and intentions.

Words are the archive of knowledge and the foundation of our ideas. The use of these elements shows his way of understanding and doing architecture.

Ignacio Urquiza Seoane studied photography in Paris, France (2002), studied Architecture and Urbanism with Honorable Mention at the Ibero-American University of Mexico City (2007), and is a Master of Science in Advanced Architectural Design from Columbia University, USA (2014). In 2008 he co-founded the Center for Architectural Collaboration, where he served as Design Director until 2018.

As of 2019, he founded and directs Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos, an architecture studio based in Mexico City.

Ignacio has developed and coordinated architectural and urban projects throughout the Mexican Republic collaborating with a large number of architects. His work has been published in different national and international print and digital media and has received various awards in the architectural field, among them the Luis Barragán Award for the Project "Young Architect Career" by the College of Architects in 2017 and the Emerging Voices 2019 award. , awarded by the «Architectural League of New York».
Read more
Published on: October 19, 2024
Cite: "The voice of the landscape. Las Rocas by Ignacio Urquiza Arquitectos" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/voice-landscape-las-rocas-ignacio-urquiza-arquitectos> ISSN 1139-6415
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...