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Casa San Francisco: A Home Painted by Time

Nestled among the vineyards outside a colonial-era Mexican city, the house grew from an encounter between the local monastic architecture and landscape

Jorge Garibay Architects

Casa San Francisco by Jorge Garibay Architects in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
By Editorial Staff -

Nestled among vineyards on the outskirts of San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, Casa San Francisco is a celebration of nature and history.

Originally commissioned as a vacation home in this historic colonial-era city in the state of Guanajuato, the residence, designed by Jorge Garibay Architects, explores the concept of time to create a deep connection with the surrounding viticulture.

 

A project with deep historical roots

Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


The history of this project goes back to the 16th century, when the founding of San Miguel de Allende (originally San Miguel el Grande) coincided with the introduction of vine cultivation in Mexico by Franciscan friars. In fact, Catholic evangelization not only shaped the nation’s spirit but also had a marked influence on urban planning and monastic architecture during the colonial period.Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


Just as the local growing conditions define a wine’s unique character through a combination of natural factors (climate, soil) and human factors (cultivation methods), the monastic building style imported from the Mediterranean likewise transformed and became unique in its new Mexican setting. This fusion of local history and the natural environment formed the third key aspect of the project: creating a space for contemplating the natural order and celebrating the seasonal cycles of growth, change, and decay.

 

The essence of Casa San Francisco

Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


To fulfill these meditative and functional roles, the home has five distinct volumes that open onto distinct landscape types, framing views of the vineyards and surrounding environment.Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


The interiors center on a transverse corridor accessed from a double-height entry that acts as a pivot point between outside and the home’s private areas. The west section houses the common spaces – the living room, kitchen, dining room, terrace, and service/utility rooms – while the four bedrooms are in the east section.Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


With its understated form and neutral color, the home reflects the local monastic style but reflected through a contemporary lens to evoke the idea of nature shaped by time. The project uses durable, premium materials, including local stone to provide the primary material and surface texture, unpolished Mexican marble for the floors, and hand-applied limewash in a tone that harmonizes with the natural color of the stone to produce a uniform, monolithic appearance. The design also incorporates traditional construction methods.

 

Celebrating the passage of time

Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


A conceptual simplicity marks the interior design, with oak furnishings that add warmth while recalling the exterior tones. A distinctive feature is the lighting design, intended to reproduce the light characteristics found in a 16th-century monastery while meeting modern standards.Casa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects


Casa San Francisco embodies a design philosophy that, in the spirit of Luis Barragán, treats time as a painter of surfaces and atmospheres. To create this refuge for quiet contemplation in the Mexican landscape, the design team focused less on static perfection and more on how beauty unfolds with the passing of time.

 

>>> Discover Mexico through Edmund Sumner’s Casa Mexicana, in which he documents the country’s rich architectural panorama through 350 photographsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay ArchitectsCasa San Francisco - Jorge Garibay Architects © Cesar Belio, courtesy Jorge Garibay Architects

 

Credits


Location:
San Miguel de Allende, Mexico
Architect: Jorge Garibay Architects

Consultants

Built and design: Edgardo Estrada Ruiz
Structural design: Juan Carlos Cisneros

Photography by Cesar Belio, courtesy of Jorge Garibay Architects

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