RE / Camarim Arquitectos


© Nelson Garrido

© Nelson Garrido
  • Architects: Camarim Arquitectos
  • Location: Lisbon, Portugal
  • Author Architect: Vasco Correia, Patrícia Sousa
  • Area: 400.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Nelson Garrido
  • Collaborators: Sebastien Alfaiate, Joana Ramos

© Nelson Garrido

© Nelson Garrido

Text description provided by the architects. This is our first intervention on a Português Suave building – the distinctive architectural style of the dictatorship. In this case, a house built in the 1940s that should be updated to accommodate a family of our time. The house was practically intact and, if it is true that its language reveals a political ideology and a set of aspirations that are now consensually condemned, it is nonetheless very well built, the fruit of an effective design and a skilful use of available resources.


© Nelson Garrido

© Nelson Garrido

A time and emotional distance to the context in which the house emerged allowed us to look at it without a sense of retaliation or glorification, but rather as ready-to-use material, to the individual measure of desire and need. The spatial composition of the house and its language – a fabricated ethnography – are accepted as such. The new walls, windows, doors and fittings are recognizably new but do not establish a dialectical relationship with the original elements: rather a peaceful and silent coexistence.


Sketch 1

Sketch 1

© Nelson Garrido

© Nelson Garrido

Sketch 2

Sketch 2

© Nelson Garrido

© Nelson Garrido

On the ground floor, a succession of small mono-functional spaces around the entrance hall – office, living room, dining room and kitchen – are united in a single multi-functional space crossed by natural light and views of the garden. In the upper floors, intimate spaces undergo minor changes to achieve the same spatial and material dignity of social spaces below. Among these spaces, the most substantial change took place in the attic, where the maid’s room became the master bedroom, arranged around a large lantern that houses bath spaces. We had already explored the idea of a space as a sensing device to capture light and the passage of time in DG I, although here the light appears more autonomous and absolute.


© Nelson Garrido

© Nelson Garrido