Project implementation: Brazil
Project development: Brazil
This project was developed for the Amélias of the Amazon. This community, which extracts andiroba and Amazonian spices, is located in the Tapajós National Forest (FLONA) in the state of Pará. Its name was intended to redefine "the Amélia women," which in the last century was the name given to women who dedicated themselves exclusively to caring for the home. Thus, the Amélias of the Amazon represent the entrepreneurship and protagonism of Amazonian women. Developed in partnership by architects Tales and Taís Kamel, from the Kamel Arquitetura firm, and architect Matheus Vieira. Located in the Tapajós National Forest, in the heart of the Amazon, it combines contemporary architecture, sustainability, and innovation, creating a laboratory in harmony with the forest. The idea stemmed from a contemporary Amazonian architecture project, using wood as a guiding material, readily available in the region. We could use traditional forest labor and construction methods to translate vernacular architecture with low-carbon construction, adapted to the local, hot, and humid Amazon climate. Through the use of shading elements, rich in details characteristic of local architecture, the project highlights the importance of traditional peoples' knowledge. The project strengthens local communities, promoting the development of a sustainable bioeconomy, and extolling the richness of contemporary Amazonian architecture, in harmony with and respect for nature. The forest resists, the forest pulses, the forest lives.