This striking slate gray structure unfolds from its verdant environs with a low-profile envelope that rises out from under a grassy hill. Constructed by G ateliers Architecture in Guatapé-Antioquia, Colombia, it’s one of a series of 8 ecological shelters that make strident efforts to seamlessly integrate modern architecture with local topography.
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This is awesome – i really like the design and idea of letting the earth insulate – but the colors are kind of “cold” and looks like an iffice more then a home… maybe that’s the New Orleans in me though, who wants to live in a house of wild colors and ornate design
Awesome indeed. Right down my little valley. I like it- the more unlike homey it is, the better for moi.
Too dark and too angular to “fit into its surroundings.” Like I just said in another post – for me, too much green architecture turns into pretentious self-indulgence on the architect’s part, with urban hipster aesthetics that obliterate any connection to natural forms, nature, and the human element. I suppose some appreciate this sort of straight-edge minimalism, but it alienates me because they so consciously reject natural forms, colors, and materials. Minimalism that’s still tied to nature and humanity is possible – see Japanese architecture.