NIU Coliving, Narvarte Neighborhood Homes, Contemporary Mexican Housing, Architecture Images
NIU Coliving in Narvarte, Mexico City
5 May 2020
NIU Coliving Narvarte
Architect: CRAFT Arquitectos
Location: Narvarte, Mexico City
NIU (nest in Catalan) evokes the creation of community within the space where one lives. This 4-level building with 54 housing cells is not a traditional residential project, it applies a model designed to share and cohabit in spaces created in search of developing human activity for a new generation of citizens who are looking for a place that gives them a sense of “belonging”.
The conceptual axis of the project is to generate complete habitable cells (a fully furnished space with a bathroom, kitchen-dining room, closet, bedroom and living room with all the services included) that allows its inhabitants to have privacy and independence in a building that favors belonging to something bigger: a community of diverse people, who share compatible interests and ways of living.
That is why the architectural program is enriched with a variety of common spaces: co-working, gym, playroom, podcasts room, two roof gardens where there are recreational activities, meeting rooms and cafeteria.
The architectural project was born from the intervention of a residential building from the 60s in the Narvarte neighborhood. The original building respects the main longitudinal and transverse structural axes, the circulation spaces and the original façade modulation that is intervened only by intentionally opening openings.
The original 90m2 apartment space is reconfigured into two complete 45m2 living cells. The original nucleus of stairs is eliminated, and they are placed in a linear way within the circulation space, which allows access to the last of the apartments and has the finish of natural light in the corridors.
NIU responds to the needs of inhabiting new generations, where sustainability is an important factor; the building does not have parking spaces because it favors the use of collective means of transport and with less environmental impact such as bicycles, it has solar panels that use its energy to heat water and is committed to the recovery of its original building.
The objective of the project is to respect the memory of the old building starting from a city that has already been adequately built and as a conscious exercise in adaptive reuse for this type of existing building in use, maintaining many of its original qualities, but transforming it into a vibrant space to live looking for ways to add and give new life to the historic neighborhoods of the city, generating a new sense of community and contributing to the urban fabric.
“Now more than ever before, the rehabilitation and recovery of constructed buildings is a central issue. Rehabilitation is always more sustainable than any new way of building.” Alan Rahmane
The space in which one lives significantly defines the way in which a lifestyle is lived, in which the exchange of experiences and sustainability are fundamental pillars. Niu seeks to create this necessary feeling of cohabitation, the conceptual argument and the execution of the architectural project are designed and built to share experiences within a community.
NIU Coliving in the Narvarte Neighborhood, Mexico – Building Information
Architects: CRAFT Arquitectos
Program: Residential
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
Year: 2020
Status: Built
Photographs: Carlos Figueroa and Jaime Navarro
NIU Coliving in the Narvarte Neighborhood, Mexico City images / information received 050520
Location: Condesa, Mexico City
Mexican Architecture
Contemporary Architecture in Mexico
Mexican Architecture Designs – chronological list
Architecture Tours in Mexico City by e-architect
BBVA Bancomer Mexico City
photo © Dolores Robles-Martinez
BBVA Bancomer Tower Mexico
U-125 Office Building
Architects: ARCHETONIC – Jacobo Micha + Jaime Micha
photo © Rafael Gamo
U-125 Office Building
Mexican Architect: design firm listings on e-architect – architectural practice contact details
Amsterdam 75 House, Hipódromo, México D.F.
Design: Jorge Hernández de la Garza
photo : Jorge Hernández de la Garza
Property in Hipódromo
Cocoon Hotel, Tulum, Quintana Roo
Architects: DNA Barcelona
image from architects
Cocoon Hotel Building
Comments / photos for the NIU Coliving in the Narvarte Neighborhood, Mexico City page welcome