Mexico boasts a wealthy architectural historical past, from historical pyramids constructed 15,000 to twenty,000 years in the past to ornate Spanish Baroque types launched in 1521. This heritage continues to encourage main architects, as showcased within the guide Mexico Trendy by Tami Christiansen.
Modernism emerged after the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920), symbolizing a contemporary nationwide identification impartial of colonial influences. Architects drew from indigenous pre-Columbian designs, incorporating elemental geometric types that resonated with European modernist simplicity. Tami Christiansen explains, “Mexican architects reinterpreted their concepts, softening them with color, texture and by connecting them extra to panorama and local weather. In addition they gave concrete extra tactile, expressive qualities.”
Beneath are eight distinctive houses by famend Twentieth-century modernist architects and up to date designers working in that custom.
1. Praxis by Agustín Hernández Navarro
Accomplished in 1975, this Brutalist residence contains a putting sculptural tower rising like a periscope over the forested Bosques de las Lomas neighborhood in Mexico Metropolis. Agustín Hernández Navarro (1924–2022), a pioneer of Mexican modernism, drew inspiration from a treehouse, mixing pyramids and prisms to echo pre-Columbian structure. Uncooked uncovered concrete defines its huge, geometric types.
2. Casa Bernal by Stylish by Accident
Emmanuel Picault of Stylish by Accident designed this concrete extension to a Sixteenth-century colonial mansion in Querétaro. Emmanuel Picault notes, “The mission affords a playful relationship between the outdated and new.” Full-height steel-and-glass home windows body views of the extinct Peña de Bernal volcano. Mexican slate flooring complement sculptural spheres crafted from native volcanic soil, alongside 1972 furnishings by Ricardo Legoretta.
3. Rain Harvest Dwelling by Javier Sanchez Arquitectura and Robert Hutchison Structure
This 2020 household retreat in Valle de Bravo features a porch with rainwater harvesting, a plunge pool, steam bathe, and solar-powered sauna. Pine partitions and roof mark it as an experimental construct, uncommon for wooden in Mexico. Javier Sanchez states, “It is an experimental home.” Ferns and an oak tree honor the positioning’s authentic forest, seamlessly mixing indoor and outside areas amid heavy wet seasons.
4. Casa de Tierra-Catarina by Taller Héctor Barroso
Nestled lakeside, this house makes use of rammed earth partitions and a picket roof for pure local weather management. Volcanic stone fireplace pits heat the outside terrace throughout winter. Héctor Barroso favors conventional strategies, harmonizing the construction with its rural environment. Habitación 116 dealt with the interiors.
5. Casa Izar by Alonso de Garay of Taller ADG
Impressed by mountain cabins, this new-build options pitched roofs and deep eaves. Expansive home windows overlook timber, a lake, and mountains. Native volcanic rock types the espresso desk and pool, whereas Oaxaca black clay ceramics by David Pompa adorn the lounge designed by Estudio MDB.
6. Casa Coyoacán by Pedro Reyes and Carla Fernández
In Mexico Metropolis’s bohemian Coyoacán—as soon as house to Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera—this double-height library serves as each residing area and studio for sculptor Pedro Reyes and designer Carla Fernández. Stone stairs mimic Aztec temples, tough concrete evokes Brutalism, and tropical crops nod to Luis Barragán’s gardens. Mustard yellow accents brighten the monochrome palette, mixing Mexican modernism, Brutalism, and pre-colonial influences.
7. Casa Aviv by CO-LAB Design Workplace
Following Luis Barragán’s custom of fluid indoor-outdoor connections, this house hyperlinks double-height residing and eating areas to a pool and backyard by way of pivoting floor-to-ceiling doorways. Joana Gomes, co-founder, shares, “We really feel a deep connection to Barragán—his mastery of sunshine and materials, his interaction of massiveness and lightness and his poetic method of bringing the surface in and indoors out.” Pure air flow enhances the unified design.
8. Casa Monte by Carlos H Matos
Perched on Oaxaca’s distant shoreline and completed in 2023, this rosy-hued pigmented concrete house resembles a weathered destroy amid untamed nature. Its higher part references conventional palapa roofs of dried palm leaves, paying tribute to pre-Hispanic structure whereas envisioning Mexico’s architectural future.

