BHHS Colonial Homes San Miguel Lists Mexico's Only Starchitect Listing

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1678230532SAN MIGUEL, MEXICO - Central Mexico’s San Miguel de Allende—home to Luxury Real Estate member Broker Greg Gunter and a popular UNESCO-designated World Heritage site—proves a treasure trove of 16th and 17th century Spanish Colonial architecture adored by both the Mexican Nationals and American expats who call this city home. But among these architectural treasures, few residents could name a single architect for their design.

Architectural hotspots like Los Angeles, however, sport dozens of “Starchitect” homes, so named because the architect has reached star status as a household name. Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hollyhock House, an early example of California modernism, might be better known because of Wright’s name recognition, but L.A.’s 1959 hillside-perched The Stahl House—a Pierre Koenig design and one of three dozen Case Study House projects built through the 1960’s—is better recognized than many actors after having been the set for so many movies and TV shows. L.A.’s Starchitect list seems endless: Ray & Charles Eames, Rudolph Schindler, and Richard Neutra are joined by newcomers Frank Gehry, Renzo Piano and Rem Koolhaas, to name only a few.The courtyard of Casa Legorreta best exemplifies Ricardo Legorreta’s trademark design style.

Real estate Broker Gunter, owner of the city’s Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices office, notes that San Miguel de Allende hosts only a singular Starchitect home whose architect is known globally. “And it’s the only current Starchitect listing in the entire country of Mexico,” adds Gunter.

Casa Legorreta, named for the late iconic Mexican modernist master Ricardo Legorreta—the first Latin architect to ever receive the AIA’s top-level award, the Gold Medal—was only completed in 2005 in the historic part of the city’s Centro on Aldama street, named in 2022 by Architectural Digest as the 11th prettiest street in the world. Though Mexico City-based Legorreta designed dozens of homes in Mexico City, Valle de Bravo and Monterrey, somehow San Miguel did not make his radar until 2002 when fans of his style hired him to design their home.Casa Legorreta’s double lot affords this swimming pool and expansive gardens studded with palm trees.

The homeowners, a quiet British couple who prefer to avoid the spotlight, kept their design masterpiece a bit of a secret until recently when they hired Gunter and his Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices agency to market the home for sale. Broker Gunter and his U.S. marketing team were subsequently able to garner publicity for the home to date in the Wall St. Journal, Mansion Global, and Dirt, visually opening the home to the public and giving regional exposure to a previously well-kept secret. “It’s the first San Miguel de Allende home,” adds Broker Gunter, “to be covered by the Wall St. Journal.”Massive sliding doors open the living room to the rear veranda, promoting the indoor-outdoor lifestyle so popular in San Miguel de Allende.

In contrast, Legorreta’s design for Hollywood producer Joel Silver, on the market for $52MM USD according to the Wall St. Journal, has enjoyed wide publicity since construction. Even Legorreta’s 1985 design for late actor Ricardo Montalbán in Hollywood garnered substantial publicity in 2012 when it sold for $38MM USD.  True architectural aficionadas like Silver—who also owns homes by fellow Starchitect Frank Lloyd Wright—realize that these architectural masterpieces are rare jewels that seldom come to market.Dual dining rooms adjoin—indoor and outdoor—each with a wood-burning fireplace, adorned with plates bearing a Legorreta design.

Gunter, who was an architect before becoming a Broker, notes that Casa Legorreta boasts the expected design imprint and indigenous craftsmanship familiar to Legorreta’s style, all delicately balanced between austerity and generosity: striated colonnade walls carved from solid and void, casting striking shadow-and-light patterns; water stairs creating gentle waterscaping white sound throughout the home; the use of wall as sculpture; warm textures and colors with natural materials like terracotta, wood and split-face stone; and the counterbalance of concrete spheres around the grounds. Casa Legorreta’s courtyard and gardens clearly reflect the Latin American tendency to safeguard private space—all outdoor spaces are completely private from neighboring residences.Listing agent and Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Broker Greg Gunter shows the Parroquia view from the roof terrace of Casa Legorreta.

While attributed primarily to Ricardo, the senior Legorreta was in fact working with his son Victor by that time and the two worked together on many projects before the senior Legorreta passed away in 2011. “The San Miguel residence was truly a collaboration between my father and myself,” says Victor Legorreta, who maintains a warm relationship with the owners to this day. In fact, Victor oversaw the recent renovation of a stairwell railing to ensure it kept the Legorreta design theme consistent. Victor sees a lot more of San Miguel de Allende these days as the lead designer for the city’s two Marriott projects, the soon-to-open Clevia and the in-progress La Pilarica mixed-use project.

While San Miguel de Allende has enjoyed many accolades that continue to roll in—the city was once again recently named #1 Small City in the World for the 5th time by Condé Nast Traveler—it is now also known as home to the only Starchitect listing in central Mexico. Design fans can see photos and virtual tours of the home on the Luxury Real Estate web site and at www.BHHSColonialHomesSanMiguel.com