Reyes Rios + Larrain Studio have sensitively recreated a guest property in the Yucatan Peninsula named soon after the agave plants that were as soon as farmed on the home.
Casa Sisal is situated on a 200-square-meter plot of land enclosed by old masonry walls that date back to the 1800s.
The function of Architect Salvador Reyes Rios and Josefina Larrain Lagos now sets the normal for colonial remodeling and hacienda restoration in Mexico.
They are properly identified for their senstive conversions of former haciendas and colonial dwellings in Mexico to luxury hotels and private homes while engaging the tradition of outside Yucatan architecture.
The crew has spent 15 years experimenting with a concrete creating mixture formed of white cement and resins from neighborhood chukum trees, originally mastered by the Mayans.
The bedrooms are completely molded in the standard cementatious mixture, even including a generous platform creadling a sunken bed.
In truth the whole construction, within and out, is now developed with this ancient Mayan strategy.
The studio is quite hands-on, taking on not just notion, completed layout and construction, but also all the detail of the interior finish.
The 2 bedrooms and bathrooms occupy either finish of the construction, with shared communal public room in the center, blending outdated and new with grace and aplomb.
Cooling breezes ventilate these smaller sized rooms naturally by generous openings to the outdoors.
Glass sliding doors open up on both sides of a communal kitchen and living room in the center.
The open center maximizes ventilation for the duration of the summertime heat.
Exterior stairs lead to a rooftop terrace for further cooling.
Even though being a modern pared-down eco-chic retreat, Casa Sisal also captures the magic and mystery of the ancient Maya.
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