Negotiating Boundaries: Climate and the Building Envelope in Central American Architecture

Negotiating Boundaries: Climate and the Building Envelope in Central American Architecture
Open House in the Jungle by  Ksymena Borczynska hiding among the trees. Image © Ksymena Borczynska Open House in the Jungle by Ksymena Borczynska hiding among the trees. Image © Ksymena Borczynska

In temperate and cold climates, architecture typically begins with a defensive gesture. The building envelope is a sealed boundary designed to resist the exterior environment through insulation, vapor barriers, and mechanical control. In cold countries like Canada, where winter temperatures can plunge well below freezing, airtightness is not a luxury. In this context, buildings must resist the exterior environment entirely to maintain interior comfort. However, in Central America, a region spanning from Belize to Panama, architectural logic shifts from exclusion to negotiation. In this region, the envelope is not a wall of defense but a specialized filter.

Read more »