Edmund Sumner photographs P+0’s home of interconnected towers in Northern Mexico

A tree in the middle of a house

Mexican architecture firm P+0 has completed a home on a steep hillside in Monterrey, using smaller volumes clustered together to form the resident’s living spaces, which was captured by photographer Edmund Sumner.

The project was completed in 2021, and is named after the primary volumes that make up its angular appearance. The Los Cubos residence encompasses 646 square metres and has an inverted layout that makes the most of its steep site in Monterrey.

The exterior of an angular house
P+0 has designed a cubic, angular residence called Los Cubos

P+0, a local firm founded by architect David Pedroza Castañeda, designed the home as a cluster of several smaller “pavilions” that intersect in key moments to create larger spaces for the family’s communal use.

On the main floor, which is actually the uppermost level, the studio placed the home’s kitchen, living and dining rooms. These surround a courtyard one storey down, where a tree grows.

A corridor in a house next to floor-to-ciling-windows
It is arranged around a tree in the courtyard

Locating these spaces on the top floor gives the spaces the best views of the surrounding hills, including a well-known local mountain, the Cerro de la Silla.

Outside the sliding glass doors that front the living room, the architecture studio built a pool into the rooftop.

Los Cabos by P+0 Arquitectura
The home was designed as a cluster of pavilions

“These 5×5 towers are thought of as pavilions that house the program by occupying the small clearings in the forest,” said Pedroza Castañeda.

“The arboreal mass of local trees gives privacy to the house, blocks sun exposure and becomes the space’s protagonist,” he added.

A corridor in a house overlooking a tree
Passageways have large windows that look onto the courtyard

A monolithic concrete stair leads down to the bedroom level, which is organized around the central courtyard.

On this level, a family room opens onto the courtyard, which helps connect the bedrooms to the outdoor space.

Los Cabos by P+0 Arquitectura
The main level is at the top of the structure

“The intersections between [the volumes] form bigger, interconnected spaces,” explained P+0.

“A series of transparent passageways communicate independent spaces while allowing the visual continuity between the different patios and gardens,” the studio added.

The base of the towers comprises mechanical space that is used by the rooms above. In one of the volumes, P+0 included a multipurpose space, to try to make the most of the available footprint.

This space is accessed via a secondary staircase that connects all levels of the home.

Los Cabos by P+0 Arquitectura
The home has a secondary staircase

P+0 selected a stark material palette for the project.

The structural concrete and concrete block that forms the primary structure were left exposed throughout the building.

“Concrete and insulated white block form the solid walls of the towers while glass and steel allow for uninterrupted views and a connection with the exterior spaces and vegetation,” said Castañeda.

A tree in the centre of a house courtyard
Structural concrete was left exposed throughout the building

This is offset within some of the living spaces by wood-covered floors and ceilings. In circulation spaces, the floors were left as exposed concrete.

Monterrey is among the largest cities in Mexico and is the capital of the state of Nuevo León. Other residential projects that were completed in the area include a holiday home made from a single pink-coloured material and a minimalist home by the Spanish and Mexican firm Cadaval & Solà-Morales.

The photography is by Edmund Sumner.


Project credits:
P+0 team: David Pedroza Castañeda, Ariel Govea, Hugo Regalado, Adriana Guisa
Construction: HBG Construcciones. Hyaell Briones de la Garza, José García Ariel Govea, Raúl Herrera.
Project manager: Beatriz Chávez.
Structural engineering: Emilio Gonzalez Saucedo

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