Houses

Designed by archi­tects for travel enthu­siasts: Our curated coll­ection of out­standing holiday acco­mo­da­tions — also via map. Do you already know our new entry?

Find unusual places and loca­tions — for work­shops, team events, mee­tings, yoga retreats or private fes­ti­vities.

Magazine

Take a look behind the scenes in sec­tions such as Homes­tories and Insights, visit hosts or read Posi­tions on current topics.

Shop

URLAUBSARCHITEKTUR is Europe’s leading online portal for archi­tec­tu­rally out­standing holiday homes. We’ve published a series of award-winning books – available in book­shops or directly in our online shop.

About us

What we do: A special network for special houses.

How does HOLIDAYARCHITECTURE work?

How to find your vacation home with UA and where to book it.

Become a partner

Does your house fit in with UA? Time to get to know each other!

Real estate

For sale! Here you will find our current sales offers.

News­letter

We regu­larly write exciting, inte­resting news­letters that are worth reading. You haven’t sub­scribed yet?


Houses

Designed by archi­tects for travel enthu­siasts: Our curated coll­ection of out­standing holiday acco­mo­da­tions — also via map. Do you already know our new entry?

Spaces

Find unusual places and loca­tions — for work­shops, team events, mee­tings, yoga retreats or private fes­ti­vities.

Magazine

Take a look behind the scenes in sec­tions such as Homes­tories and Insights, visit hosts or read Posi­tions on current topics.

News­letter

Sign up for our news­letter now.

Favo­rites

Your bucket list of inte­resting places.

Casa Modesta – Ode to Joaquim

Portugal has seven wonders. The Ria Formosa Nature Park on the Algarve is one of them and is as beautifully formed as the name suggests.

by Britta Krämer in April 2017

This is an article from our archive. It was published in April 2017, so some details may no longer be up to date.

 Casa Modesta – Ode an Joaquim in  /

It is an impressive land­scape, which is shaped by its many lagoons and by the great diversity of its flora and fauna. Wind, jet streams and tides ste­adily alter the face of this lagoon land­scape, and anyone who takes the time to stop and watch will behold a natural spec­tacle beyond compare.
In the heart of this natural wonder stands a simple, white house. Peacefully and atten­tively, it gazes out at mud­flats, sand­banks, salt works and at the past of a family whose history and life­style is embedded in this very place, a family that is remem­bered here and whose story con­tinues to be spun with care.

The Casa Modesta is a country house hotel with nine guest rooms, private patios with ham­mocks, rooftop ter­races with broad horizons, fig and almond trees, an organic vege­table garden and a pool with a sun deck. Grand­mother Car­minda con­jures up the magic in the kitchen, and meals are enjoyed tog­ether at the long table in the dining room. The plain interior of the rooms steers your attention towards the few carefully placed items of tra­di­tional local crafts, as well as to the interplay between light and shade, between inside and outside. This leaves suf­fi­cient space for the thing that the Casa Modesta does in such a unique way; the atmo­sphere it creates is a har­mo­nious syn­thesis of puristic archi­tecture and a warm family envi­ronment.

Echoing through the place is the free-thinking spirit of a man whose ori­gi­nality and whose sense of family form the foun­da­tions for the Casa Modesta. As such, the house is a very per­sonal expression of the love that Carlos and Vânia Brito Fer­nandes, the host and architect respec­tively, had for their “Grampa”. During our Interview, Carlos went back in time to the days of his childhood:

“Our grand­father Joaquim Modesto de Brito was born in 1931 and died in 2000. He was a fisherman and was known as “O Campeão” (The Champion) to his friends. He was our inspi­ration behind the Casa Modesta project because the house is full of memories of him. The­r­efore, the house is dedi­cated to our grand­father, the man who taught us so much.

Grampa was a special person. He had had a tough childhood; my great-grand­parents were very strict and they almost never allowed him to play with his friends…Then he married my grand­mother Car­minda and decided to transform all the land that he owned, the cars, the house and his entire life into a unique colourful play­ground so that he could feel free. And so he began to decorate the garden, creating con­crete paths edged with small rocks; with small ponds deco­rated in the middle with recycled objects, and trees were adorned with his coll­ection of colourful glass bottles. My grand­father had three VW Beetles in his favourite colours, yellow, blue and red. Every June, the entire family made a road trip along the coast between Casa Modesta and Minho. The cars were deco­rated like a Christmas tree with sti­ckers, dolls and all manner of objects, with the whole family’s cases stacked on the roof.

Grampa had a sea­front pro­perty with a wooden “pala­fitic” house not far from the Modesta land. When the high tide came in, the house was right in the middle of the lagoon, sur­rounded by water. Friends and neigh­bours arrived with fresh seafood and many stories to tell each other while waiting for the tide to go out again….Grandpa lis­tened to the radio all day long. He had put one on the rooftop of the house in order to make his fishermen friends listen to the music and news while they were fishing in the lagoon. He had a sketchbook where he regis­tered the weather con­di­tions every day and where he drew sketches of the boats he built.I loved his house an I have a lot of won­derful memories about the moments we shared with our family and friends out there. “


The pre­vious family house on the Modesta land built by Joaquim which dated back to the 1940s, con­sisted of two buil­dings and was rebuilt from scratch. Only parts of the old walls have been kept, but the con­tem­porary new building still keeps the spirit of the ori­ginal family home. The main premise was to retain the volume of space, the pro­por­tions of the rooms as well as all the ele­ments of the old house, i.e. the outdoor stair­cases, the flat roof-top ter­races, the cistern, the covered patios and the wood-burning stove.
With Casa Modesta, Vânia Brito Fer­nandes, co-founder of PAr – Pla­ta­forma de Arqui­tectura – designed the pro­totype for a house that trans­lates ancestral legacies into a con­tem­porary lan­guage, the CASA CHÃ ®. It is a type of house that explores the archi­tec­tural legacy of the region in a modern way, but which remains faithful to tra­di­tional building skills and local mate­rials and which inte­grates memory as an archi­tec­tural disci­pline into the creative process.

The social and eco­nomic network of the neigh­bourhood played a pivotal role for the deve­lopers; in the case of the Casa Modesta, the archi­tec­tural refe­rence to context became a model initiative for the neigh­bourhood. Long before work got under way on con­s­truction, the ageing resi­dents of this sug­gestive lagoon land­scape, fishermen, hair­dressers, farmers, all old friends of “O Campeão”, had a say in the deve­lo­pment of the Casa Modesta. Gentes de Quatrim – People from the local area – is the name of the extra­or­dinary project on neigh­bourhood par­ti­ci­pation, cap­tured by João Mas­ca­renhas in a set of highly expressive photos.

Anyone who stays in the Casa Modesta expe­ri­ences a house which is capable of telling its story without having to say a word. And this unpre­ten­tious approach has a striking effect. “Our door is always open to welcome the people who come here with the same sense of joy that we had when we ran into the open arms of our grand­parents when we were young.” The history of the Casa Modesta is one of great archi­tecture and subtle aes­thetics, of local culture and tra­dition, of intimate family ties and of happy childhood memories. And of what might just be the most stunning sunrise on the Algarve. In a nutshell, the Casa Modesta is two things above all else – A love story. And another little wonder of the Ria Formosa.


Text: Britta Krämer, April 2017

Credits of all family pic­tures and dra­wings: Carlos Fer­nandes, Joaquim Modesto de Brito | Credits photos of Casa Modesta: Carlos Fernandes/Casa Modesta, Angela Zacarias, João Carmo Simões | Credit photos “Gente de Quatrim”: João Mas­ca­renhas Pho­to­graphy

Overview: Here you can find all our HomeS­tories at a glance! If you want to stay up to date, you can opt-in for our Home­Story-News­letter here.

The house

Hotel Casa Modesta
Casa Modesta
Hotel Casa Modesta
Casa Modesta is located in the Ria Formosa Nature Park, a pro­tected natural lagoon on the Por­tu­guese Algarve. To the owners Casa Modesta means more than just a hotel: they asso­ciate happy childhood memories with the estate that once belonged to their grand­father.

0 Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
For booking enquiries, please contact the respective accommodation. How does HOLIDAYARCHITECTURE work? Read our FAQ.