
Architects Luis Velasco Roldan and Ángel Hevia Antuña
have built a prototype house designed for Ecuador’s climate and social
conditions. The small house is made from locally-sourced, natural
materials and uses passive solar heating.
According to the architects, knowledge of
traditional building techniques in Ecuador has been all but lost,
replaced by the use of industrialized materials that don’t perform well
or that have significant environmental impacts. They hope their
prototype house will help to reverse that trend.

The small house has an almost square floor plan of 48.7 m2 (524 ft2).
There is a tree growing right through the center of the house. The
architects don’t say why they built it around a tree, so we assume it
was just for the novelty of it. However it’s not something we would
recommend; there seems to be too many potential problems with water
leakage, insect entry, the tree dying as a result of construction
activity, and of course the possibility of it falling at some point.

One half the house is the
living/dining/kitchen space. Floor-to-ceiling sliding glass doors open
the space to the outdoors. The other half has the bedroom, bathroom and
an entry foyer that doubles as a home office. It’s hard to see in the
photos but there is a barn-style sliding door to close off the bedroom
from the main living space. The bed nook is positioned directly below a
large skylight. The bathroom has a walk-through design that separates
the vanity from the shower and toilet compartment.

The architects chose a surprising material
for the insulation: pumice stone. The entrapped air bubbles insulate the
structure while the stone itself provides thermal mass, moderating
night and day temperature extremes. Monitoring of the prototype showed
that the interior remained a comfortable 20 to 21°C even as outside
temperatures ranged from 12 to 20°C.

pumice insulation
The construction lumber came from local
tree species. The siding is Ecuador laurel and the framing is
eucalyptus, an inexpensive and strong wood that grows quickly. The house
is topped by a living green roof. Pumice stone was again used for
insulation as well as to provide a drainage layer for the soil and humus
above.
Source: https://smallhousebliss.com
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