Alternating volumes, solids and voids characterise the architecture of Villa MM.
The emptying of the ground floor once again accentuates its ‘inside-outside’ axis. It is therefore the internal functionality that opens up to the activities of the external space; from the courtyard in front to the pool, from the living area to the space in front.
A wide connecting staircase connects the ground floor with the sleeping area located on the upper floor; the same floor has large terraces to the south and north-west.
A dematerialised architecture, where light and surfaces are the protagonists in addition to the sculptural quality of the work. How to convey the social and cultural importance of architecture, which engages the world in a continuous exchange with other disciplines
Dematerialised architecture is not an architecture that disappears, but on the contrary becomes a medium that alludes to immateriality without ever neglecting formal and traditional appeal.
The use of rough-hewn stone cladding becomes almost predominant over the entire architecture of Villa MM, making it anchored in the ground, embedded in the context and capable of dictating the methods and conditions for future developments on a much larger scale.