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Work.

Our work is not about filling space—it’s about understanding it.

Each project begins with how it will be lived: the routines, the pauses, the way light moves, the way a place holds people over time. What you see is the result of that process—spaces that feel resolved, quiet, and clear.

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Ukiyo Beach Club

San Agustinillo, Oaxaca, México
Status: BUILT
 
A boutique hotel set on the beachfront of San Agustinillo, Oaxaca. Designed to harmonize with its surroundings, the project is organized into twin towers that frame a transition from dense jungle to the open expanse of the sea.
 
Natural materials and open, permeable spaces define the architecture, allowing air, light, and views to move freely throughout. The project prioritizes balance—between built form and landscape, between enclosure and openness—creating an atmosphere that encourages rest without imposing it.

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Casa Aetea

Ciudad de México, México

Status: BUILT

 

Casa Aetea is a project designed around tranquility and presence. The apartment brings together art, meditation, and everyday life within a spatial framework that supports focus and introspection.

 

Transparent dividers organize the space into distinct zones while maintaining visual continuity. This allows each area to function independently without breaking the overall flow.

 

Upon entry, the apartment reveals itself gradually through light and proportion. Soft, neutral materials define the palette, creating a calm backdrop that highlights carefully selected details without excess.

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El Refugio

Malinalco, Estado de México

Status: Design

 

El Refugio begins with the existing landscape. The site, densely populated with trees, was studied in detail to ensure their complete preservation.

 

A quantitative analysis divided the land into sectors, identifying where intervention was possible without altering the natural condition. Each plot was evaluated individually, leading to the development of a modular system that adapts to specific site constraints.

 

The resulting architecture is distributed across the terrain, expanding or contracting depending on each sector’s capacity. Vegetation is not integrated—it is prioritized. The project positions itself as a framework for inhabiting the landscape without compromising it.

Casa Tezontle

Ciudad de México, México

Status: Under Construction

 

A house grounded in material and context, Casa Tezontle draws from the legacy of volcanic stone that has shaped the region for centuries.

 

Tezontle is used not as an accent, but as a defining element of the project. The ground floor opens fully toward the garden, integrating kitchen, dining, and exterior into a continuous living space. Volcanic stone, vegetation, and light work together to create a layered environment.

 

Terracotta-cal walls and mid-tone wood flooring introduce warmth and consistency, reinforcing a sense of continuity throughout the house. The project moves naturally between interior and exterior, without relying on rigid boundaries.

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Del Territorio al Habitante

Mulegé, Baja California Sur, México

Status: BUILT

In collaboration with Ode.Archivo

 

A research-based proposal for social housing in Mulegé, Baja California Sur, built on the principle of flexibility.

 

The project introduces a reticular system that allows homes to grow or reduce modules over time, responding to the evolving physical and economic needs of each family. Each module contains essential living functions and can be combined through open spaces that enable future expansion.

 

Belong Before You Build.

Mexico. The Netherlands.
 

We help you find, design, and build a home in Mexico that feels connected—to the land, to the culture, and to you.

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