House Río / LABarq / Mexico

  • Project: House Río
  • Architect: LABarq
  • Location: Mexico, Santiago de Querétaro
  • Year: 2025
  • Area: 559 m2
  • Photography: Ariadna Polo

House Río by LABarq sits on a trapezoidal lot in Santiago de Querétaro and uses a strategic V-shaped plan to orient daily life toward a protected courtyard and the rear garden. The architecture balances urban privacy with luminous openness, framing long views while choreographing movement between social and private realms.

A V-Shaped Residence Oriented Toward Nature

The plan converges toward the landscape, forming a central courtyard that becomes the nucleus of domestic life. While the street façade remains measured and introverted, the garden side dissolves into light, views, and generous indoor–outdoor connections.

House Río by LABarq — street facade, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — corner facade and entry, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Spatial Organization & Architectural Strategy

LABarq organizes the home into two wings that open onto the courtyard:

  • Social wing: living, dining, mezzanine, and an office with independent access—extending to the pool and covered terrace.
  • Private wing: service core, circulation, bedrooms, and shared bathroom below; upper level hosts the primary suite and secondary bedrooms with controlled outlooks.

Between them, the courtyard acts as the sheltered outdoor room linking interior flows and framing daily rituals.

House Río by LABarq — garden elevation with folding volumes, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — courtyard view with glass links, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — glazed corner detail, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Structure, Transparency & Lightness

A clear structural language of steel columns, plates, and tension rods enables long spans and a subtly floating social wing that lifts off the ground. This lightness enhances visual continuity across the garden, while the bedroom volumes counterbalance with measured transparency and shade control.

House Río by LABarq — cantilevered upper volume detail, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — entry hall with stair, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Living Experience: Flow & Atmosphere

Arrival sequences frame the courtyard immediately, drawing the eye through layered volumes. Double-height spaces link to a mezzanine and terrace, while evening lighting warms the steel rhythm and stone surfaces, turning the house into a quiet beacon against the landscape.

House Río by LABarq — living room at dusk facing the garden, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — living room corner and firepit view, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — sunken patio with circular firepit, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Social Core: Living, Dining, Gallery

The open-plan living and dining rooms align to the courtyard edge, with tall glazing that captures shifting light. A gallery-like corridor becomes a daily promenade alongside the garden, strengthening the home’s sense of continuity.

House Río by LABarq — living room vignette with tall glazing, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — dining and living overview with double-height glazing, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — living room with sofa and round stone table, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — compact reading nook with round table and library shelves, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — double-height dining room with wall art, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — glazed gallery corridor overlooking the garden, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Kitchen & Terrace: Indoor–Outdoor Everyday

The kitchen anchors family life with a generous island and direct access to a shaded terrace. Sliding doors create a seamless threshold for cooking, dining, and lounging across seasons.

House Río by LABarq — kitchen opening to covered terrace with bar, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — frontal view of large kitchen island with seating, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — oblique view of marble kitchen island and storage wall, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Retreats & Rituals

Private spaces are tuned for calm—stone, wood, and filtered light shaping an atmosphere of repose. An outdoor stone bathtub nestles within a small courtyard, turning daily routines into landscape rituals.

House Río by LABarq — outdoor stone bathtub courtyard, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — hallway with wall sconces and natural light filtering through curtain, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — bedroom with stone accent wall, wood flooring, and ambient lighting, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — minimalist walk-in closet with integrated lighting and marble island, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Materials & Landscape Integration

A warm, regional palette is deployed with precision: Santo Tomás marble and walnut veneer establish a tactile baseline; ribbed wood panels articulate planes and screens; and dry gardens with native plantings stabilize the site while reducing maintenance.

House Río by LABarq — front facade with stone cladding and desert landscaping, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo
House Río by LABarq — facade detail with cactus garden and modern lighting, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
Photography © Ariadna Polo

Drawings

Plans and elevations reveal the V-shaped strategy and sectional links that choreograph views, light, and circulation between the two wings and the central courtyard.

House Río by LABarq — basement plan, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — ground floor plan, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — first floor plan, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — roof plan, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — front elevation drawing, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — right elevation drawing, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — left elevation drawing, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — rear elevation drawing, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — section X1, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico
House Río by LABarq — section Y1, Santiago de Querétaro, Mexico

Posted by LABarq

LABarq (Laboratorio de Arquitectura) is a Mexican architecture studio based in Querétaro. The firm positions itself as a laboratory of ideas, blending design and construction through experimentation, reinterpretation, and material inquiry. LABarq is committed to pushing boundaries in architectural thinking—rethinking typologies, programmatic relationships, systems, and construction methods. Their work seeks to respond to site, climate, and context while maintaining a spirit of inventiveness and discovery.