ABSTRACT

The house should contribute to the formation of the urban environment, keeping in mind the spiritual and material needs of man, of a real man and not an abstract being ; a man, that is, who neither loves nor understands the unending repetition and monotony of the same type of dwellings, among which he can distinguish his own only by a number. He does not love the arrangement of a chessboard, but rather those environments that are both cozy and dynamic. Therefore, the conditions of the land, the sunshine, the countryside, the vegetation, the existing environment, and the sense of color should inform the composition of the site plan so that the residents have the impression that in these quarters there exist some spontaneous and authentic things, inextricably fused with the place from which they rise. 1