House of the Flying Beds / AL BORDE


© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio
  • Architects: AL BORDE
  • Location: Ecuador
  • Collaborators: Charlotte Vaxelaire
  • Construction Management: José Guerrero
  • Structure: Patricio Cevallos & Mathieu Lamour 
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: JAG Studio
  • Construction: Maestro Miguel Ramos + ENOBRA + Edison Marcial

© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

Text description provided by the architects. Built in the late eighteenth century, at first sight the house gave the impression of not being useful at all. It had only one-floor plan, the brick floor was broken, the eighty square meters were dark and cold, and the wood roof structure was rotten. Only the earth walls seemed able to be refurbish, which at first glance they did not look so bad at all.


© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

Attic Plan

Attic Plan

The family does not seek for privacy: kitchen, living, dining, and bathroom are for communal use. Almost public because the project is thought to receive visitors and friends all the time. In this house for all, the private space is reduced to the bed of each one of the members of the family.


© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

The final finishes of the completed work are almost the same as they were there in eighteenth century. The refurbish actions are a few and strategic: structural walls are reinforced, rammed earth is treated, doors and windows that were in poor condition are changed, and the floor is polish concrete.


Longitudinal Section

Longitudinal Section

Section AA

Section AA

The project demands a new roof, so we take advantage of this action and solve the bedrooms too. A new upper bond beam connects the walls. Over it, eucalyptus trusses were installed each meter and fifty-five centimeters. Between each truss there is a bed, in total three pairs of habitable trusses were assembled.


© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio

It was impossible to reuse the roof tiles; their poor condition turned them into patio backfill material. The roof is solved with shingles of old tires and a ridge of recycled glass that swallows light, heats and illuminates the interior.


© JAG Studio

© JAG Studio