Casa Chachalaca / Juan Carlos Flores / Mexico

  • Project: Casa Chachalaca
  • Architect: Juan Carlos Flores
  • Location: Mexico, San Francisco (San Pancho), Nayarit
  • Year: 2025
  • Area: 685 m2
  • Photography: TreeMedia

A House Suspended Between Jungle and Sea

High above the Mexican Pacific, Casa Chachalaca appears to hover amid treetops, its pale terraces and curved volumes dissolving into the tropical canopy. Designed by Juan Carlos Flores, the house captures a state of suspension—where horizon, jungle, and sky merge in a single panoramic field. The project sits on a steep hill thick with papelillo trees and palms, the natural habitat of the chachalaca bird that lends the house its name.

The challenge was steep—literally. A 25-meter drop separates the access road from the lowest platform. Flores approached the topography not as an obstacle but as choreography: a sequence of platforms descending through light, water, and vegetation.

Geometry and Concept

Flores imagined the home’s geometry as if a stone had fallen at its center, sending ripples outward in gentle waves. Straight lines represent the man-made; curves echo the natural. Their fusion shapes the architecture’s character—an equilibrium between control and organic flow.

This conceptual “shock wave” travels through the palapa, terrace, and perimeter pool, turning static structure into a sense of movement. Every platform, stair, and curved wall becomes part of this ripple effect, guiding the eye toward the horizon.

Arrival and Spatial Sequence

The house unfolds vertically, experienced through descent rather than procession. Entry is through a carved stone portal framing sky and water, leading to a reflecting fountain of hand-hewn marble. From there, a stairway in open air serves as a circulation spine, connecting living levels that cascade toward the ocean:

  1. Entry and study/TV room, a quiet threshold space.

  2. Fire-pit terrace and daybed beneath a wooden pergola.

  3. Guest suite, accessed through a tall, narrow corridor for dramatic compression.

  4. Palapa great room and main terrace, the social heart of the house.

Behind the curved sofa of the palapa, a vestibule distributes to the master suite, kitchen, and guest bath. The master suite opens directly onto the pool deck, with its bathroom connected to the water by a short flight of steps—an elemental ritual of bathing and immersion.

Structure and Engineering

To “levitate” the home above the forest, the team developed a reinforced-concrete frame anchored into the hillside. The large pool terrace acts as a structural diaphragm, tying the platforms together while concealing technical spaces below—cistern, surge tank, mechanical room, and staff quarters.

The house’s stability is quiet: the visible drama is not in beams or trusses but in the sensation of floating lightness achieved through precise engineering.

Material and Craft

Flores chose a limited material palette, hand-finished by local artisans. Each surface speaks of craft and climate:

  • Exterior walls: off-white cement and sand plaster, reflective under sun.

  • Interior walls: polished white cement, giving a soft, stone-like patina.

  • Built elements: bed platforms, headboards, and countertops formed in white cement.

  • Exterior floors: hammered white cement—cool, slip-resistant, and luminous.

  • Interior floors: gray microcement, seamless and tactile.

  • Bathrooms: polished gray cement with inset white bola stone for texture.

  • Roof: palapa structure of guayabillo wood with royal palm thatch.

Each finish is alive to touch and designed to weather gracefully; the house will age as the surrounding forest does—slowly, beautifully, and without pretense.

Light, Air, and Water

The palapa is not only an architectural symbol but a climatic machine. Its vast thatched roof breathes, ventilates, and shades, eliminating the need for mechanical cooling. Breezes slide between treetops, across water, through open volumes. The perimeter pool mirrors sky and amplifies airflow through evaporative cooling.

Sunlight enters laterally, grazing curved walls; interiors glow rather than glare. Even at midday, the house remains cool, its tones subdued to the rhythm of sea wind and foliage.

A Handmade Modernism

Though distinctly modern in composition, Casa Chachalaca is built entirely by hand. Every trowel stroke, timber joint, and palm frond reveals the labor of Mexican artisans. Flores’s design reframes luxury as craftsmanship and connection: a place where architecture slows to the pace of the landscape.

The Spirit of the Pacific

More than a house, Casa Chachalaca is an experience of horizon—a suspension between mountain and ocean, earth and air. It represents a quiet confidence in Mexican coastal architecture: rooted in tradition, guided by geometry, and sustained by climate intelligence rather than technology.

In Flores’s words, this is architecture “that listens to nature until the lines disappear.”

Casa Chachalaca dusk aerial by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
Photography © TreeMedia
Casa Chachalaca pool terrace aerial by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
Photography © TreeMedia
Casa Chachalaca sun loungers detail by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca palapa terrace by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca wraparound pool by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca firepit terrace by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca stair garden by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca pool edge by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca spa detail by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores — infinity pool and spa terrace in Mexico
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Aerial exterior of Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores nestled in Mexico’s tropical landscape
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Palapa lounge with circular built-in sofa at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Open palapa lounge with ocean and jungle view at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores in Mexico
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Sun loungers by the infinity pool at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Shallow sun shelf with loungers at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores in Mexico
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Garden-side lap pool running along the bedrooms at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Arched entry with wood door and cactus at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Terrace with circular fire pit and timber chairs at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores — terrace fire pit lounge at sunset in Mexico
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Infinity pool at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores reflecting a sunset over the Pacific in Mexico
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Daytime ocean view from the infinity pool at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Primary bedroom at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores with view to the pool and jungle in Mexico
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Warm bedroom interior with brass pendants at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Sculptural headboard and pendant detail at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores in Mexico
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Curved plaster shower with niche and bench at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Pebble mosaic shower floor detail at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Shower with doors opening toward infinity pool at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Casa Chachalaca bathroom with double vanity and textured stone wall by Juan Carlos Flores
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Curved plaster shower with window and vanity reflection at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Exterior view of bedroom with direct pool access at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Detail of pool steps and water reflections at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Guest bedroom with pendant lights and woven textile décor at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Headboard and pendant lamp detail at Casa Chachalaca guest bedroom by Juan Carlos Flores
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Ensuite bathroom steps leading toward vanity and bedroom at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Bathroom vanity detail with stone basins and black fixtures at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Curved kitchen counter and dining area at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores
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Casa Chachalaca kitchen with curved counter, open shelves and appliances by Juan Carlos Flores in Mexico
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Cozy modern living room with large glass sliding doors overlooking a scenic coastal view, minimalist decor, neutral tones, natural light, indoor-outdoor design, sea scenery, relaxing atmosphere, architecture art designs.
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Minimal exterior stair detail at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores in Mexico
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Interior stair scene with motion blur at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Contemporary architectural ceiling design with textured surfaces and pebble accents, featuring modern artistic styles for a sleek and stylish interior space.
Photography © TreeMedia
Vibrant wicker and wooden architecture of a traditional thatched roof with hanging musical instruments and decorative elements, showcasing tropical design and cultural craftsmanship.
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Exterior plaster stair and light wells at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Night lighting along exterior stairs at Casa Chachalaca by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
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Exterior view of Casa Chachalaca with palapa and infinity pool set in jungle by Juan Carlos Flores, Mexico
Photography © TreeMedia

Posted by Juan Carlos Flores

Arq Flores is a Mexico-based architecture studio headed by architect Juan Carlos Flores. The practice specialises in modern architectural design for villas, condominiums, offices and bespoke developments in both Mexico and the Middle East. With a design philosophy rooted in authenticity and tailored client experience (“arquitectura genuina para gente única”), the studio emphasises clarity of form, sensitivity to context, material integrity and bold yet refined concepts.