Cesar Gaupo's largest masterpiece is a riverside abode on the hills of Mt. Banahaw | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

The artistry of fashion designer Cesar Gaupo was as limitless as his mind. One would know just by observing his sophisticated designs of ready-to-wear clothes, gowns, and footwear. His creative skill had even transcended to other fields of design, as witnessed by his friends and colleagues who have visited the forest-tucked house sketched, designed, and built by Gaupo in Majayjay, Laguna.

“It’s the most beautiful tropical house I’ve ever seen,” recalls fashion designer James Reyes who went to Gaupo’s Balinese-styled mountain resort in the summer of 2011. Reyes even remembers vividly the first time he glanced at the home. “When we arrived, we were greeted by Cesar peeking out of the huge front gate. Then he stepped out, naka-pamewang. ‘At bakit ngayon lang kayo?!’ Sabay malakas na tawa!”

Entrance to Gaupo’s home. Photo by Boboy Consunji

The front gate Reyes was referring to was a tall white-washed concrete wall that surprisingly blends naturally with the area’s green foliage. In the middle of the wall are antique wooden doors. Push these open and, as Reyes recalls, you will be greeted by an open layout, a vast lawn that separates two structures: the living room and receiving area at the left and the dining area at the right. Both designed like a nipa hut.

 

The receiving and living area. Photo by Boboy Consunji

“Both structures feature very high and very imposing thatched roofs,” says Reyes. The high ceiling, where an intricate layer of cogon serves as roofing, provides ventilation, making the use of air condition or electric fans unneccessary.

A grassy courtyard and large stone steps lead to the living room. Once you’re inside, you’ll notice two sets of big wooden doors on opposite sides, giving way for the forest’s airiness and relaxing ambience to pervade the structure. A juxtaposition of concrete and wooden furniture fill the room’s marble flooring, accented by Gaupo’s trinkets, bold-colored pillows, lamps, and reading materials.

One wouldn’t notice much difference once the doors are closed, however, since no concrete walls separate the inside from the outside. Only glass corners paired with wooden blinds keep the living room enclosed.

Gaupo stands in the dining area where wooden chairs surround an antique table. Photo by Boboy Consunji

The same set of thatched cogon roofing tops the pavilion enclosing the six-seater dining area. Unlike the living room, this structure carries a more simple layout. Raj-styled wooden chairs and a round antique table are in the middle while a wooden buffet table and tea trolley stand quietly at the back.

In between the two structures is another gate, as if Gaupo’s unconventionally built nipa hut-styled receiving rooms aren’t enough to leave guests in awe. The doorway leads to stone steps wet by the running river it is located on. These steps, designed and built by Igorot workers, lead to another white-washed concrete wall that apparently separates Gaupo’s master bedroom from the whole property.

This means before you reach the bedroom, you have to climb the stone steps wet by the cascading river surrounded by green foliage. “You will definitely get your feet wet when you cross the brook,” says Reyes.

A view of the cascading river in front of Gaupo’s master bedroom. Photo by Boboy Consunji
Gaupo’s master bedroom. Photo by Boboy Consunji

From floor to ceiling, Gaupo’s master bedroom is dominated by bamboo. At the middle is a four-poster bed that Gaupo also designed. Behind the headboard is a tall white wall and hiding behind it are the toilet and bath. But the one detail that still fascinates Reyes up to this day is the one hidden under Gaupo’s bedroom floor.

“Cesar had vents installed at the floors of his bedroom,” he says. “Since this structure is on stilts, therefore elevated, the naturally cooled breeze from the running river enters his room constantly, so he doesn’t need air-conditioning at all. His bedroom is always cool. In fact, Cesar said it gets really cold in the morning.”

Photo by Boboy Consunji

Another interesting part of Gaupo’s bedroom is the courtyard in front of it where a white-washed concrete wall with a picture window stands. “No function really, just for additional privacy, but it creates an interesting frame against the lush forest.”

One of the white-washed walls at the courtyard. Photo by Boboy Consunji

Reyes only visited Gaupo’s home once, but its impression on him lasted for years.

“It’s a well-designed juxtaposition of rigidness and nature,” Reyes tells Nolisoli.ph. And come to think of it, the whole compound is actually a mix of those contrasting things—from the living and dining room’s marble flooring and thatched cogon roofing to the doorways’ imposing entrances built on stone steps by the river. It’s a mixture of all things modern and antique, carefully sewn together by the artistry of Gaupo.

As Reyes said, “Only a brilliant mind can think up of these details.”

His passing last Saturday was truly a sad moment for the Philippine design world. But like what his friends and peers said, Gaupo will always be greatly remembered not just for his works, his mentorship, his house, but also for his happy and humble self. (Read: Friends and peers recall the happy and humble “bagets” that was Cesar Gaupo).

 

All featured photos courtesy of Boboy Consunji

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