El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina

  • Project: El Abrazo House
  • Architect: Mateo Gagliardo
  • Location: Argentina, El Chirigüe Island, Lechiguana Stream, Delta del Río Paraná, Entre Ríos
  • Year: 2022
  • Area: 154 m2
  • Photography: Ramiro Sosa

Architecture in Harmony with the Wetlands

Set within the vast wetlands of Argentina’s Paraná River Delta, El Abrazo House by Mateo Gagliardo embodies an architecture of coexistence. More than a home, it is a thoughtful response to an ever-changing aquatic landscape, where rising water levels, isolation, and self-sufficiency define everyday life.

Anchored on El Chirigüe Island along the Lechiguana Stream, the house blends with the terrain through an earthen berm that rises to meet the elevated structure—an architectural embrace between land, water, and sky.

Concept & Design Strategy

The design emerged from three defining forces of the Delta: flooding, landscape, and autonomy. To inhabit such a dynamic ecosystem, Gagliardo conceived an architecture that adapts rather than resists.

Two principal axes organize the project:

  • The Y-axis establishes a visual and spatial connection between the river, the dock, the gallery, and a mature tree at the rear of the site—linking architecture to its natural anchors.

  • The X-axis, running through the interior, aligns the gallery as the home’s connective heart, weaving together bedrooms and communal spaces while maintaining constant dialogue with the outdoors.

The result is a house that dissolves boundaries between inside and outside, allowing the landscape to shape daily life.

Elevation & Integration

To counter seasonal flooding, El Abrazo rests above the ground plane on an elevated platform. The earthen berm acts as both access route and topographic gesture, softening the transition between terrain and structure.

This approach ensures accessibility during high-water periods while preserving the site’s natural hydrology. The slender structure appears to float among the tree canopies—a minimal footprint yielding maximum sensitivity.

Spatial Organization & Materiality

Spatially, the home balances intimacy and openness.

  • The private zone—comprising bedrooms, bathrooms, storage, and mechanical rooms—is constructed using Steel Frame technology with exterior Minionda Cincalum cladding and interior phenolic panels, ensuring durability against humidity.

  • The social area is conceived as a transparent pavilion, projecting outward in a cantilever that immerses occupants in the surrounding foliage. Large panes of glass and the open gallery merge interior and exterior, turning gatherings into extensions of the landscape.

Natural ventilation, filtered daylight, and lightweight materials create an atmosphere of warmth and adaptability, mirroring the ecosystem’s organic rhythm.

Sustainability & Self-Sufficiency

In this remote context, El Abrazo House operates completely off-grid, embodying principles of sustainable independence:

  • Solar Power: Photovoltaic panels generate all electrical energy.

  • Water Cycle: River water undergoes sedimentation and chlorination for domestic use.

  • Waste Management: A biodigester processes sewage, converting waste into harmless organic matter.

These systems ensure the home’s autonomy and ecological balance, aligning with the architect’s philosophy that architecture should coexist with nature, not dominate it.

Material Poetics & Sense of Place

Gagliardo’s design embraces essentialism and restraint.
Industrial yet tactile materials—corrugated metal, timber, phenolic boards—echo the working structures of the Delta while expressing refined simplicity. The transparency of the social core contrasts with the solidity of the private wing, creating a dynamic interplay of exposure and shelter.

At dusk, when golden light reflects off the wetlands, the house glows like a beacon—a quiet dialogue between human craft and natural resilience.

El Abrazo House by Mateo Gagliardo stands as a model of contextual, resilient architecture.
It is an elevated shelter, a bridge between land and water, and a manifesto for sustainable living in delicate ecosystems. By integrating topography, structure, and autonomy, the project exemplifies how thoughtful design can translate environmental challenges into architectural beauty.

This is architecture of empathy—embracing its context, its inhabitants, and the rhythms of the Delta.

Modern minimalist house with large glass windows and flat roof, surrounded by lush greenery, showcasing contemporary architecture and innovative design.
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa
El Abrazo House | Mateo Gagliardo | Delta del Río Paraná, Argentina
Photography © Ramiro Sosa

Posted by Mateo Gagliardo

Mateo Gagliardo is an Argentine architectural designer and graduate of the National University of Rosario (UNR). He leads his own practice, focusing on residential architecture grounded in climate, site, and structural expression. His work balances minimal intervention with spatial richness, seeking clarity in form and detail. Projects like Casa El Abrazo demonstrate his interest in engaging delicate environments (such as wetlands) and integrating structure, light, and nature in elegant dialogue. Mateo pursues architecture that is sensitive, poetic, and deeply rooted in place—crafting homes that feel both light and anchored.