Nirvana Home by AGI Architects

Nirvana Home
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

There are no words to define the concept of Nirvana, a mental state with effects in the physical and spiritual planes.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

This makes it difficult to explain and only those who practice meditation can understand how far they are from reaching it.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

These thoughts led us to name this project Nirvana. Words like “house”, “villa”, or “palace” fail to represent the scale of the building, its materialisation, or its spatial order. We prefer the term “home”.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

The features of a home are not physical, but rather emotional and affective, and Nirvana Home has been designed and built to satisfy the needs of the inhabitants in these terms.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

This home is also a reflection of the culture within which it is developed. In this sense, its point of contact with the location at ground level is a public floor dedicated to socialisation, for the gathering of family and friends.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

With this purpose in mind, the spaces were designed to look at one another, detached from the surroundings and interconnected through a series of courtyards.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

The series of geometric voids in grey polished marble contrasts with the exterior’s white rough ceramic finish. The duality of textures is similar to that found in a marble quarry, where the polished geometric voids contrast with the natural mountain terrain.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

Inside Nirvana Home, little by little, step by step, the horizon and the sea begin to dominate and the building is marked by a formidable diagonal that displaces matter so as to reach maximum transparency, allowing rooms on different façades to look towards the sea.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

This strategy generates a string of empty spaces that become three-dimensional courtyards holding gardens at different heights and acting as shared spaces for parents and children.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG

The last floor of Nirvana Home is where the private spaces are found, for the exclusive use of the parents who, from this privileged position, are able to preside over the indoor activities of the home without losing sight of the sea and the horizon. Source by AGI Architects.

Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
  • Location: Mesillah, Kuwait
  • Architect: AGI Architects
  • Main Architects: Nasser B. Abulhasan, JoaquínPérez-Goicoechea
  • Design Project Leader: Daniel Muñoz
  • Onsite Project Leaders: Sara Barranco, Samer Mohammad
  • Project Team: Margaux Van Houtte, Abdul Hafiz Bahi El Din Mohamed, Javier Alonso, Nima Haghighatpour, Ana López, Marisa Ollero
  • Engineers: Arturo Macusi, Joseph Thomas
  • Client: Private
  • Area: 6,000 sqm
  • Year: 2017
  • Photography: Fernando Guerra – FG+SG, Courtesy of AGI Architects
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Photo © Fernando Guerra – FG+SG
Nirvana Home
Scheme

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *