images by joão morgado
upon the request of the client, the restoration pays homage to the building’s history and the family that has occupied it up until present day. with this in mind, filipe pina has retained the original granite stone
the stone is supplemented only by some elements of concrete
such as the patios that have been added as new living spaces
the main drivers of the project were the contours of the land
together with the existing volume of this traditional house
consisting of an animals’ shelter on the first floor
and a small living area on the upper level
has been transformed into an ample living space with clear differentiated functional areas
the two patios – one orientated towards the sunrise and the other facing south – are independent structures that shape the topography of the surrounding land
the upper floor is then composed of the private rooms
both the scale of the intervention and the identity of the village were key factors in the architect’s design
filipe pina has retained the character of this old stone house. from the outside
the robustness of the stone and concrete contrast with the light and bright contemporary interior
architect: filipe pina arquitectura
photography: joão morgado
AXOR presents three bathroom concepts that are not merely places of function
but destinations in themselves — sanctuaries of style
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© Natanael Viera, Unsplash
Wind energy is a major source of electricity in Portugal
and the wind supply chain has a strong footprint there
Whilst offshore wind offers new perspectives
the speedy permitting and repowering of onshore wind farms remain key for the country to keep reaping the fruits of wind energy
Wind energy was the biggest source of renewable energy generation in Portugal in 2023
It covered 29% of Portugal’s electricity demand
Portugal wants to generate 85% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2030
In 2023 renewables contributed 71% of Portugal’s electricity generation
during a windy month of December the share even reached more than 80%
Portugal produced more electricity than it needed
Renewables employ around 45,000 people in Portugal (direct and indirect jobs)
Wind energy alone provides jobs for nearly 20,000 people
Simens Gamesa and ENERCON produce wind turbine blades in Vagos and Viana do Castelo respectively
and CS Wind produces steel towers and offshore foundations in their Sever do Vouga and Gafanha da Nazaré factories
Vestas operates an R&D and design centre in Porto
Nearly all wind farms in Portugal are onshore. The country wants to reach 10.4 GW of onshore wind capacity by 2030, up from 6 GW today. Repowering wind farms that reach the end of their lives between now and the end of the decade – replacing old turbines with new
more efficient ones – should help them reach this goal
Repowering nearly triples the electricity output of a wind farm while reducing the number of turbines by a quarter
And because older wind farms are usually on the best locations
repowering them with more powerful machines can really up the game
Portugal has only one small offshore wind farm: WindFloat Atlantic
But Lisbon wants to take advantage of its abundant wind resource off the Atlantic coast and do more offshore wind
It launched the initial phase for a first offshore wind auction in November 2023
The aim was to secure 3.5 GW of capacity – mostly floating wind
With the development of offshore wind Portuguese ports will play an increasing role. The ports of Averio, Figueira da Foz and Setubal are already members of WindEurope’s Ports Platform where 35 European ports with active operations and interests in offshore wind share best practices and engage with industry and policy-makers