IR arquitectura

2015-2018

IR arquitectura is a multidisciplinary collective that brings together architects, designers, and professionals from diverse backgrounds. The studio operates as an open and adaptable system, challenging social, environmental, and economic conventions to develop innovative urban, architectural, and object-based solutions with a strong emphasis on energy efficiency. Our work has been featured in major architectural publications, exhibited at leading institutions, and presented at prominent conferences and biennials. These are some of my favorite projects from my time at IR arquitectura.

Projects

2018

An experimental modular dwelling system with five autonomous functional units that can be reconfigured for different contexts. This passive house prototype operates entirely on solar energy through innovative technologies like Trombe walls and Fresnel lenses, demonstrating a synthesis between transportable architecture and sustainable living.

2017 - 2020

A residential project in San Isidro, Argentina organized on a grid of nine quadrants over two levels, with a strategic design that responds to the flood level of the site and optimizes sunlight conditions. The house balances social and intimate spaces, creating distinct relationships with exterior gardens while maintaining a consistent structural framework.

2017

A contemplative wooden pavilion created as part of the Hello Wood Argentina festival in Ceibas, Argentina. The structure invites visitors to lie in suspended nets while gazing at the sky, generating a space for introspection and connection with the universe within a systematic modular grid of nine quadrants.

2016 - 2020

A home in San Isidro, Buenos Aires, that aims to dilute its boundaries to be permeable to its environment. Situated in front of the Bajo de San Isidro Ecological Reserve, the design enhances the interaction between human habitat and biological agents, articulating a kind of mutualism with its surroundings.

2016

Renovation of a 60m² apartment from the 1960s in Barrio Norte, one of the most densely populated areas of Buenos Aires, transforming segmented spaces into an open, flexible environment through the integration of fragmented areas and strategic furniture elements.