Site icon Dezeen
Mima House by Mima Architects

MIMA House by MIMA Architects

This prefabricated house in Portugal costs about the same price to manufacture as a family car (photographs by José Campos).

Designed by MIMA Architects, the MIMA House has a modular structure and can be divided into rooms with a grid of removable partitions.

Large windows on each elevation have wooden frames and hinge open as doors.

Plywood panels transform the windows into walls to create privacy where necessary.

Some other interesting Portuguese house we've featured include one that the architect describes as a grey house with a black backpack and another with gaping chasms in the roof - see all our stories about Portugal here.

Here's some more text from the architects:


MIMA House
Viana do Castelo, Portugal

MIMA started from the intention of planning a dwelling that responds directly to the lifestyle of nowadays’ societies.

How can architecture adapt to the quick life changes and ambitions of a well informed and increasingly exigent society?

MIMA architects researched during years to be able to put together on a single object a fast produced, flexible, light and cheap yet good quality product, wrapped up with a pleasant clean design.

Motivation

More fundamentally, MIMA responds to the modern dream for clean sophisticated design and bright open spaces, launching in the housing market a dream 36 sq.m. dwelling which costs the same as a mid-range car.

Inspiration

MIMA’s concept is fundamentally inspired on the traditional Japanese house, the perfect paradigm for lightness, flexibility, comfort and pleasing lines.

The restrained order of its standardized building parts appealed to MIMA architects as the hallmark of a deeply rooted culture, confirmed over centuries and easily adaptable to any new development.

MIMA uses prefabricated construction methods, the secret for its quick production and low price.

Likewise, traditional Japanese residential post-and-beam construction could be considered inherently a system of prefabrication: it was based on regularized column spacing known as the ken, the infill elements of shoji screens, fusuma panels and tatami mats, prefabricated by individual craftsmen in different locations of Japan could be precisely put together almost like pieces of a puzzle.

Flexibility/Mutability

MIMA consists of a square post-and- beam structure completely glazed on all sides, subdivided by modular 1,5mx3m wooden frames.

MIMA houses come with additional plywood panels which can be placed on the inside and the outside of the building, for a replacement of any window by a wall in a matter of seconds. The inside is defined by a regular grid of 1,5m, whose intermediate lines leave gaps for internal walls to be added when needed.

Again, in a matter of seconds, a subdivided space can be replaced by an open space or vice versa.

Moreover, each side of internal and external walls can have a different color/finishing, which allows a dramatic change through a simple wall rotation.

Despite its standardized construction methods, MIMA houses can be customized in so many parameters, that you’ll hardly see two equal houses.

Interface

MIMA houses can be tested and customized any time at www.mimahousing.pt.

A 3D software developed by MIMA’s architects and software engineers allows a recognition of your land through Google Earth and generates an automatic 3D model for a realistic perception of the house and site.

This software allows for walking inside the house and defining the architectural finishes– external walls, internal divisions, materials and colors.

Construction: June 2011

Exit mobile version