Some houses are designed. Others are remembered. Casa Tao, by Mexican architecture practice HW Studio, is the latter — a home shaped not by an image, but by a way of living. Located in Puerto Vallarta on Mexico’s Pacific coast, the project responds to climate, memory and the deeply personal story of its inhabitants.

In Puerto Vallarta, where sun and humidity define the rhythm of daily life, shade is not simply relief — it is refuge. For Gustavo, who grew up locally in a humble family home, shelter and seclusion were not abstract concepts but lived experiences. The house needed to embody that sense of protection and coolness, not only physically but emotionally. Shade, in Casa Tao, becomes a promise of calm — a sanctuary from the noise and heat of the outside walls.


Gustavo’s intellectual curiosity also shaped the home’s direction. With interests spanning philosophy, architecture, music and photography, his references lean toward formal clarity and restraint. The influence of figures such as Alberto Campo Baeza, Fan Ho and Andrei Tarkovsky can be sensed in the home’s quiet geometry and its reverence for light and shadow.
A formative trip to Japan with his wife Cynthia and their daughters further anchored the family’s aspirations. They described wanting to feel as though they were “living inside a Japanese museum” — not in a grand or austere sense, but in the way such spaces hold stillness. Where light filters gently. Where time slows.


Rather than opening out towards the landscape, the architecture turns inwards. Large glazed façades were avoided to prevent intense heat, and an oblique angled relationship to a tree-lined plaza allows the sea breeze and scent to pass through without exposing itself fully to the coastal glare.



Layered vertically, the bedrooms, garage and service areas form a grounded base, while above, a suspended double-height volume contains the social spaces. Elevated above street level, these living areas feel surrounded by air, open to the trees and salty breeze that crosses the plaza. Elevated patios act as terraces for contemplation, subtly framing sky and foliage.




The bedrooms gather around a patio, where a curved wall and tree creates a natural softness and welcome threshold for visitors. Rather than turn its gaze outward to the neighborhood, the home opens to the sky, seeking shade, breeze and filtered light — favouring introspection over exposure. Everything is arranged so that living happens in a slower, fuller way.
The materiality of the house is tactile and sensory. White surfaces glow under the coastal sun, while concrete absorbs light rather than reflecting it. An honest material that becomes warm through use and time, where light does not bounce — it settles.


There is an affinity between Casa Tao and the ideas explored in Junichiro Tanizaki’s In Praise of Shadows. Tanizaki described shadow not as darkness, but as depth — as a veil that allows beauty to emerge gradually. Casa Tao embraces this sensibility. Light is never assertive; it filters and diffuses, allowing spaces to unfold slowly. Here, dwelling becomes a form of study — an invitation to pause and contemplate. The house withdraws gently, offering shade as sanctuary. Every corner encourages you to remain rather than pass through, and each shadow feels like a quiet promise of wellbeing.


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