Zentral Mixed-Use Development Jalisco

Zentral Mixed-Use Development

Design: ARCHETONIC. Zentral is located on a property with unusual geometry. It is a mixed-use development with offices, a shops, and apartments. To better serve the large number of homes each tower has its own amenities section on the middle and upper levels.

Amani Mixed-Use Development in Puebla

Amani Mixed-Use Development

Design: ARCHETONIC. Amani will be located within one of the new developments in the city of Puebla: Lomas de Angelópolis Cascatta. This will be a mixed-use development including banks, schools, stores, and green spaces.

Casa Datri and Dasa, Mexico

Casa Datri and Dasa

Design: [mavarq] Marco Velázquez ARQ. Located at Amanali Golf and Nautical club in the city of Tepeji del Rio, Hidalgo, a 45 minute drive from Mexico City. Two adjacent plots of 14 m length by 36 m depth each, with the back facing North. The site has a continuous slant of 4 m from front to back.

Filamentary Chapel in Jalisco, México

Filamentary Chapel in Jalisco

Design: Di Vece Arquitectos and Francisco Morales Dufour. The concept is to create a processional scheme, a peripheral pathway around the building that promotes an introspective process in preparation for the religious ceremony and for a personal spiritual seclusion.

ColiRoma CientoVeinteOcho Colonia Roma Norte

Coli Roma CientoVeinte Ocho

Design: Arqmov Workshop. The building is designed using imaginary aspects of public-private space. The building and its urban setting lead to spatial permeability between the two through an “urban pit stop”.

Polyester House in Tlayacapan

Polyester House Tlayacapan

Design: Productora, architects. This building design started when a friend of the architects inherited of a number of polyester structures recovered from a modular house where they used to spend their weekends in the 1970s.

Fundación/Colección Jumex, David Chipperfield

Museo Jumex Building Mexico

Design: David Chipperfield Architects with Taller Abierto de Arquitectura y Urbanismo. A structure that celebrates the industrial heritage of its site context in Mexico City, the Museo Jumex is home to the largest private collection of Latin American contemporary art in the world.

IPE House in Mexico: Monterrey Home

IPE House Monterrey

Design: P+0 architecture. A house for people with dogs requires a large amount of open space; more so, when its inhabitants are big fans of plants and outdoor activity.

Balmori Rooftop Bar Mexico City: Roma Norte

Balmori Rooftop Bar Mexico

Design: Taller David Dana Arquitectura. The creative process for this rooftop project experienced multiple design facets in many different levels. The evolution from Schematic Design to Construction Documents was built based on a deductive process of clever decision making.

El Campanario House in Santiago de Queretaro

House in Santiago de Queretaro

Design: Axel Duhart Arquitectos. An unusual contemporary Mexican residence: two rectilinear forms are set at 90 degrees to each other, one floating above the other, but entwined. Generous glazing reveals an interesting structure.

Treehouse Suite at Playa Viva Hotel

Treehouse Suite

Design: Deture Culsign, Architecture+Interiors. Take a walk on the one-mile beach of this 12-key 200 acre eco-resort, and you might see an elliptical shaped bamboo wrapped platform balanced between the canopy of palms above and the green shrubbery below.

Torre Reforma Mexico City Skyscraper

Torre Reforma Mexico City Skyscraper

Design: L. Benjamin Romano Arquitects (LBRA) + Arup. An instant architectural icon, a three-sided high-rise offers a new model for concrete construction in earthquake zones

Toro Gastrobar Los Cabos

Toro Gastrobar

Design by Studio Arthur Casas Arquitectos, located in front of a spectacular view towards the Pacific Ocean, the building was transformed in order to create a transition between a traditional Mexican courtyard and open views to the landscape.

Terrace Aqua Spa Jalisco, México

Terrace Aqua Spa

Design: Lassala + Orozco Architects. The new building had as a challenge to highlight from its surroundings without disassociating itself from the existing house. this was achieved through the selection of natural materials and neutral co-lors.

Yacatas 475 Ciudad de México

Yacatas 475

Design: EDAA, architects. This building creates a design experience throughout the entire development process (design, management, construction, sales) “narrowing the bridge between Architecture and Real Estate”.