A quiet residential oasis screens itself from a São Paulo suburb
FGMF Arquitetos have created a residential oasis; Casa Cumaru is a secluded masterpiece from steel, concrete, glass and wood

A substantial São Paulo home, Casa Cumaru, offers a residential oasis in its rectangular urban corner plot. To achieve the project's extended program – covering 1,275 sq m - FGMF Arquitetos has elevated the living spaces above an open, glassy ground floor, with the main bedroom spaces shielded from view by a large, dynamic steel-framed wooden screen.
Casa Cumaru: a Sao Paulo residential oasis
This upper floor contains four bedroom suites and is suspended off a steel structure, which in turn is supported by four large concrete pillars. The living spaces are supplemented by the 22m long shade, with its large movable wooden shutters.
The house gets its name from the Cumaru cladding using throughout. This strong, dark Brazilian hardwood gives the entire structure a warm character, and pairs with the rusted metal of the structural steels. Elevating the main space enabled the architects to do away with any distinct barriers between indoor and outdoor.
The ground floor is entirely glazed, with landscaping appearing to come right into the plan. A semi-sunken basement houses the garage and service areas, while the kitchen and living room occupy the ground floor, with direct access onto the pool deck. Suspended above this deck, in a glass box lined with roller blinds, is a home theatre.
‘The lightness and transparency of the house allows total integration between inside and outside, between the building and the landscaping,’ say the architects, ‘There is no clear boundary between the built and the natural area, the plants sometimes invade the house, sometimes they are only separated from the internal areas by light glass panels.’
Set up by Fernando Forte, Lourenço Gimenes and Rodrigo Marcondes Ferraz, FGMF Arquitetos have shaped a number of stunning contemporary houses in Brazil over the last two decades. Casa Cumaru illustrates their commitment to treating each house as a singular, self-contained space, defined by materials and structure.
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Jonathan Bell has written for Wallpaper* magazine since 1999, covering everything from architecture and transport design to books, tech and graphic design. He is now the magazine’s Transport and Technology Editor. Jonathan has written and edited 15 books, including Concept Car Design, 21st Century House, and The New Modern House. He is also the host of Wallpaper’s first podcast.
-
The Subaru Forester is the definition of unpretentious automotive design
It’s not exactly king of the crossovers, but the Subaru Forester e-Boxer is reliable, practical and great for keeping a low profile
By Jonathan Bell
-
Sotheby’s is auctioning a rare Frank Lloyd Wright lamp – and it could fetch $5 million
The architect's ‘Double-Pedestal’ lamp, which was designed for the Dana House in 1903, is hitting the auction block 13 May at Sotheby's.
By Anna Solomon
-
Naoto Fukasawa sparks children’s imaginations with play sculptures
The Japanese designer creates an intuitive series of bold play sculptures, designed to spark children’s desire to play without thinking
By Danielle Demetriou
-
The new MASP expansion in São Paulo goes tall
Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand (MASP) expands with a project named after Pietro Maria Bardi (the institution's first director), designed by Metro Architects
By Daniel Scheffler
-
An Upstate Sao Paulo house embraces calm and the surrounding rolling hills
BGM House, an Upstate Sao Paulo house by Jacobsen Arquitetura, is a low, balanced affair making the most of its rural setting
By Ellie Stathaki
-
Step inside the secret sanctuary of Rua Polonia House in São Paulo
Rua Polonia House by Gabriel Kogan and Guilherme Pianca together with Clara Werneck is an urban sanctuary in the bustling Brazilian metropolis
By Ellie Stathaki
-
São Paulo's Pacaembu stadium gets a makeover: we go behind the scenes with architect Sol Camacho
Pacaembu stadium, a São Paulo sporting icon, is being refurbished; the first phase is now complete, its architect Sol Camacho takes us on a tour
By Rainbow Nelson
-
Tour 18 lesser-known modernist houses in South America
We swing by 18 modernist houses in South America; architectural writer and curator Adam Štěch leads the way in discovering these lesser-known gems, discussing the early 20th-century movement's ideas and principles
By Adam Štěch
-
Year in review: the top 12 houses of 2024, picked by architecture director Ellie Stathaki
The top 12 houses of 2024 comprise our finest and most read residential posts of the year, compiled by Wallpaper* architecture & environment director Ellie Stathaki
By Ellie Stathaki
-
Restoring São Paulo: Planta’s mesmerising Brazilian brand of midcentury ‘urban recycling’
Brazilian developer Planta Inc set out to restore São Paulo’s historic centre and return it to the heyday of tropical modernism
By Rainbow Nelson
-
All aboard Casa Quinta, floating in Brazil’s tropical rainforest
Casa Quinta by Brazilian studio Arquipélago appears to float at canopy level in the heart of the rainforest that flanks the picturesque town of Paraty on the coast between São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro
By Rainbow Nelson