Jacó

Architects: CLUBE + AGENCIA TPBA Year: 2024

Location: São Paulo, Brasil

Lead Architects: Gabriel Biselli, Thiago de Almeida and Priscila Belas

Team: Alixe Bucher, Thiago Peterhans, Daniel Cohn

Website: www.agenciatpba.com

Instagram:@agencia.tpba

Collaborators: CLUBE

Website: www.clube.site

Instagram: @c.l.u.b.e

ID and Graphic Design: Anna’s

Lighting Design: Nina Morelli

Landscape Design: Flávia Tiraboschi

Photographer: Javier Agustin Rojas

Status: Built

 


 

 

Jacó is a new fine dining and cocktail restaurant project in São Paulo, Brazil. Located in the Vila Madalena neighborhood, the restaurant occupies a conventional residential house built around the 1970s. As far as we know, the house underwent at least three alterations until the early 2020s. The last and most radical modification added five oversized metal beams to allow the removal of all existing partition and load-bearing walls. This resulted in a large, unobstructed room of approximately 120 sqm.

 

Our primary intention was to keep the house in the exact state as it was found and to highlight its figure in a neighborhood undergoing intense urban transformation. Following this intention, it was decided that the intervention should be easily legible and tectonically autonomous, celebrating the tension between these different orders in a juxtaposition of times. For the new program, we added an L-shaped folded metal wall, redefining the perimeter of the plot and dividing it into two parts: the first extends the existing room into a gardened and semi-covered veranda; the second creates a new open space for the city, like a small public plaza.

 

The plaza and the veranda are seen as intermediate spaces. The dark floor used in these  areas  unites  the  entire  plot,  creating  a  sort  of  platform  that  defines  its presence in the city. The modular metal wall consists of steel profiles and galvanized steel panels, organizing a set of different kinds of openings while also providing the complete closure of the restaurant.

 

The metal wall creates a unique relationship with the existing roof of the house and imparts a distinct urban character to this architecture. The old and the new coexist.