Monolyt By Architects Office

At Estaleiro Beach, architecture emerges from the mimesis and poetics of the erosion process, incorporating natural elements and human presence as agents. The millennial process guides volumetric architectural operations, aiming to integrate the built and preexisting environments. It proposes a solution that respects scales, experiences, and the local context, leaving a positive legacy in the region.
Project Name: Monolyt
Studio Name: Architects Office
Year: 2023
From the first visit to the site, it became evident that the coastal context of Santa Catarina, marked by urban verticalization over the last 50 years, required an architectural response that could preserve the essence of the place: unique geological formations, with rocks of varying resistance, shaping a coastline of almost untouched natural beauty.
The MONOLYT residential project, which is scenic, cinematic, and atmospheric, draws on rocks as its conceptual spark. The concept extends beyond the natural element, inspiring the creation of forms and volumes that evoke the erosive process. Human intervention aligns with natural wear, sculpting spaces, and pathways that respect and celebrate the original rocks, maintaining the balance between raw and refined.
Rock as a Monument
With topography defined by the unevenness between two plateaus, the 180-meter-deep site is juxtaposed between the sea and the river. Considering the APP (Permanent Preservation Area) strip, 30 meters of native vegetation by the watercourse are respected and preserved in their original state. The project begins to take shape only from the remaining stretch: a transitional architecture mimicking local symbols.
A large monolith emerges from the ground. This raw rock is sculpted by human erosive processes and synthesized into two adjacent volumes occupying distinct levels. Each resulting block is eroded to form central courtyards, admitting natural light and ventilation in a rhythm of solids and voids.
The program erodes the monolith. The four residential units on each floor divide the blocks into their respective sections, each oriented differently, following a logic of staggered stratification. The fissures between these sections create new permeability, creating user pathways and voids as subsystems of open spaces inhabiting the sculpted rocks.