
© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
- Architects: Ariel Jacubovich | Oficina de Arquitectura, OPA Oficina Productora de Arquitectura
- Location: Dr. TomĂĄs Manuel de Anchorena 295, Barrio Abasto, Ciudad AutĂłnoma de Buenos Aires, Argentina
- Project Architects: Ariel H. Jacubovich
- Area: 776.0 m2
- Project Year: 2014
- Photographs: Javier AgustĂn Rojas
- Construction Management: Iaron Jacubovich, Ariel H. Jacubovich
- Management And Administration: Iaron Jacubovich
- Project Coordination And Construction Management: Inés Ariza
- Collaborators: Pedro Magnasco, MartĂn Flugelman, Cecilia Segal
- Systematization And Technical Advice: Gabriela CĂĄrdenas, Javier Jarak

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
From the architect. Abasto Ancho is a building with ten residential units and one storefront. It is located at the corner of Sarmiento and Anchorena streets in the Abasto section of Buenos Aires.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
The project was developed according to the cityâs building and planning codes and regulations and conditioned by the norms of the real estate market. First, the project was developed, then the units sold, and finally the building constructed with financing from the sales at construction phase in a modality common in Argentina.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
The uncertainly resulting from not knowing the buildingâs final users at the design phase was envisioned as an opportunity to experiment with ways of organizing collective housing.

Ground Floor Plan
To that end, three lines of architectural research were pursued: the Abasto neighborhood and its relationship to the materialization of the buildingâs façade-envelope; the configuration of the residential units such that variability could be systemized; and the layout of the buildingâs common spaces in order to encourage sociability. Those three lines, each of which corresponds to an instance in the buildingâs architecture, could be called Abasto, TetrisHomes, and Branching Spaces respectively.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
Abasto
Though the building is technically located in the Balvanera neighborhood, this section of the city is known as the Abasto. That has been the case since the central market in its heart became an icon for a specific type of urban life where diversityâin goods sold and in the background of inhabitants-workersâcomes together under a single vaulted ceiling.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
The Abasto marketâs ceiling, with its ability to join the divergent, was harnessed in the project specifically in relation to the buildingâs façade-envelope. A piece that extends between the buildingâs interior and exterior gives shape to partly covered intermediate spaces, balconies, terraces, sections of archways with distinct degrees of transparency.

Model 1
The envelope was built using a system of precast concrete elements held to the building structure by metallic supports. The space between the curves of those elements and the variation in the aluminum joinery give shape to balconies and terraces. The precast elements were designed and constructed especially for the project on the basis of three models. The color of those elements was yielded by sampling the color of the Abasto marketâs ceiling/roof.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
TetrisHomes
No two apartments are alike in an attempt to expand the field of experimentation into the habitational possibilities of real estate projects. The façade is a continuous pieces behind which the units, with their different sections, fit together.

Pieces Breakdown Sections
The building contains four I-shaped units, one J-shaped unit, one L-shaped unit, one O-shaped unit, two T-shaped units, and one S-shaped unit, and the storefront.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas
Like Tetris, this project is a simple game: all you have to do is arrange the pieces as they fall, leaving no empty spaces…

Model 2
Branching Spaces
The common spaces and spaces for circulation were designed to structure one of the buildingâs branching spaces rather than as a dead-end stairwell: an ample space, with triple-height ceiling, in which neighbors run into one another as they go from the domestic interior to the urban exterior.

Axonometric
A vertical continuum that joins the lobby to the shared roof terrace in order to bring certain qualities of the streetâs public space to the doors of the inhabitantsâ homes.

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas

© Javier AgustĂn Rojas