Atrium Zürich reworks an existing villa in Küsnacht, Switzerland, for a young couple and their daughter. Designed by NOA, the house keeps its original architecture in view while answering a new family routine with brighter rooms, added color, and a more open living atmosphere. The result is a careful interior refresh that stays close to the building’s simple lines and strong connection to the lake.
Casa Lomadas is a house in Buenos Aires, Argentina, by Grizzo Studio. Set on a double plot with more than one hundred meters of lagoon shoreline, it is organized as an elongated concrete bar lifted over two artificial mounds. The result is less a conventional house than a sequence of paths, thresholds, and views that ties the interior to the water edge.
House Light is a 2025 house in Curitiba, Brazil, by Leonardo Tulli. Designed for an urban lot with tight side boundaries, it turns the home inward and pulls daylight from above. A retractable roof, central void, and carefully placed stair keep the interior bright while preserving privacy from the street.
The Long House is a four-bedroom house in Bengaluru, India, designed by Crest Architects. Set in a quiet gated neighborhood, it responds to a client’s brief for a direct, efficient, and intentional home. A 24-foot cantilever, an H-shaped plan, and a restrained material palette give the residence its clear order.
Casa Cosmos is a house in Capilla del Monte, Argentina, designed by Estudio Cristian Nanzer in the foothills of the Punilla Valley. Designed in 2024, it uses a triangular plan to orient daily life toward three distinct horizons while anchoring the rooms around a central social core. Heavy walls, shaded galleries, and a skylight make light, privacy, and climate the project’s main instruments.
House with a View in Hinterbrühl steps down the hillside above Hinterbrühl, Austria, giving a clear vantage over forest and valley. Caramel Architekten shapes the house as a stacked sequence of terraces, glazed rooms, and circulation routes that follow the terrain. Across its levels, the project reads as a precise response to slope and view rather than a single object on the land.
Casa Horizonte sits on the coast of Manabí, Ecuador, as a house whose weight and quiet presence mark the threshold between land and ocean. JGStudio works with exposed concrete and measured sequences of rooms to frame the horizon, letting the sea arrive slowly through filtered light, compressed passages, and open terraces. The result is a coastal dwelling shaped as much by material and labor as by view and air.
Casa A12 stands on a hill above Aci Castello, Italy, where exposed concrete lines meet rough lava stone. Designed by Salvatore Puleo as a contemporary house, the project replaces an old rural building with a residence that commands views of the coast, the Acitrezza stacks, and Mount Etna. It reads as both lookout and dwelling, grounded in the volcanic terrain around it.