AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos

Completed in 1994, the Igualada Cemetery was designed by Enric Miralles and Carme Pinos to be a place of reflection and memories. After 10 years of construction, their envision of a new type of cemetery was completed and began to consider those that were laid to rest, as well as the families that still remained.

The Igualada Cemetery is understood by the architects to be a “city of the dead” where the dead and the living are brought closer together in spirit.  As much as the project is a place for those to be laid to rest, it is a place for those to come and reflect in the solitude and serenity of the Catalonian landscape of Barcelona, Spain. More on the project after the break.

Miralles and Pinos conceptualized the poetic ideas of a cemetery for the visitors to begin to understand and accept the cycle of life as a link between the past, present, and future. Embedded in the Catalonian hills, the Igualada Cemetery is an earthwork that blends into the landscape as if it were a natural aspect of the land. The cemetery was designed as a tiered landscape that unfolds into the landscape as one continuous and fluid progression.

The main burial area is part of a lowered excavated part of the cemetery that is surrounded by gabion walls and the mausoleum-like burial plots, which obstructs the visitor’s vision from the surrounding context secluding them in an area where the sky is the only visible entity outside of the central burial area.  Unlike the first tier, the second tier of the cemetery has more traditional burial plots that are separated and spread out rather than the mausoleum-like burial plots below.

Also, on the second level, there is a chapel and monastery that remain unfinished; however, the unfinished aspects are not lacking, by any means, spatially rather they are void of definition and detail.  Yet, the lack of information and detailing compliments the overall sensations of the project where the spaces are open and void to retain the experiences of solitude and serenity.

As one enters the site, one confronts a set of cor-ten steel poles that double as gates to the cemetery – the poles are likened to the crosses at Calvary.  From the main entrance, there is a processional winding pathway that descends into the main burial area; the pathway is lined with concrete “loculi” – mausoleum burial plots – that wrap around the depressed space as a transition from tier to tier.  The windy path is conceptualized as the river of life that moves from a wide open expanse in the Catalonian hills to a secluded memorial space excavated below the horizon.  The circulation through the cemetery adheres to a more processional effect that focuses less on the organization of the burial plots, but rather the experience.

The materials of the Igualada cemetery tie the project seamlessly back into the landscape.  Miralles employed earthy materials of concrete, stone, and wood into the project.  The gabion walls, the worn/aged concrete, and the wooden railroad ties embedded in the stone groundscape evoke the hard and rough landscape of the surrounding hills.  The earthy tones of the materials transform the architecture into a natural aesthetic creating the appearance that cemetery has long been part of the site.

The Igualada Cemetery is in a sense an organic architecture that integrates into the natural landscape as an extension of the Catalonian hills.  It is just as much a part of the landscape as the people that visit it. Even Miralles after his sudden death in 2000 is buried at the Igualada Cemetery, which in a sense completes the cycle of Miralles life: past, present, and future all clinging onto the Igualada Cemetery.

Architect: Enric Miralles
Location: Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Project Year: 1984 – 1994
Photographs: David Cabrera
References: archinform.net, and as seen in our last post on the project here.

AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera

AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 19 May 2013.

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AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos

Completed in 1994, the Igualada Cemetery was designed by Enric Miralles and Carme Pinos to be a place of reflection and memories. After 10 years of construction, their envision of a new type of cemetery was completed and began to consider those that were laid to rest, as well as the families that still remained.

The Igualada Cemetery is understood by the architects to be a “city of the dead” where the dead and the living are brought closer together in spirit.  As much as the project is a place for those to be laid to rest, it is a place for those to come and reflect in the solitude and serenity of the Catalonian landscape of Barcelona, Spain. More on the project after the break.

Miralles and Pinos conceptualized the poetic ideas of a cemetery for the visitors to begin to understand and accept the cycle of life as a link between the past, present, and future. Embedded in the Catalonian hills, the Igualada Cemetery is an earthwork that blends into the landscape as if it were a natural aspect of the land. The cemetery was designed as a tiered landscape that unfolds into the landscape as one continuous and fluid progression.

The main burial area is part of a lowered excavated part of the cemetery that is surrounded by gabion walls and the mausoleum-like burial plots, which obstructs the visitor’s vision from the surrounding context secluding them in an area where the sky is the only visible entity outside of the central burial area.  Unlike the first tier, the second tier of the cemetery has more traditional burial plots that are separated and spread out rather than the mausoleum-like burial plots below.

Also, on the second level, there is a chapel and monastery that remain unfinished; however, the unfinished aspects are not lacking, by any means, spatially rather they are void of definition and detail.  Yet, the lack of information and detailing compliments the overall sensations of the project where the spaces are open and void to retain the experiences of solitude and serenity.

As one enters the site, one confronts a set of cor-ten steel poles that double as gates to the cemetery – the poles are likened to the crosses at Calvary.  From the main entrance, there is a processional winding pathway that descends into the main burial area; the pathway is lined with concrete “loculi” – mausoleum burial plots – that wrap around the depressed space as a transition from tier to tier.  The windy path is conceptualized as the river of life that moves from a wide open expanse in the Catalonian hills to a secluded memorial space excavated below the horizon.  The circulation through the cemetery adheres to a more processional effect that focuses less on the organization of the burial plots, but rather the experience.

The materials of the Igualada cemetery tie the project seamlessly back into the landscape.  Miralles employed earthy materials of concrete, stone, and wood into the project.  The gabion walls, the worn/aged concrete, and the wooden railroad ties embedded in the stone groundscape evoke the hard and rough landscape of the surrounding hills.  The earthy tones of the materials transform the architecture into a natural aesthetic creating the appearance that cemetery has long been part of the site.

The Igualada Cemetery is in a sense an organic architecture that integrates into the natural landscape as an extension of the Catalonian hills.  It is just as much a part of the landscape as the people that visit it. Even Miralles after his sudden death in 2000 is buried at the Igualada Cemetery, which in a sense completes the cycle of Miralles life: past, present, and future all clinging onto the Igualada Cemetery.

Architect: Enric Miralles
Location: Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Project Year: 1984 – 1994
Photographs: David Cabrera
References: archinform.net, and as seen in our last post on the project here.

AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera
AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos © David Cabrera

AD Classics: Igualada Cemetery / Enric Miralles + Carme Pinos originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 19 May 2013.

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Libeskind Selected to Design Ohio Statehouse Holocaust Memorial

Daniel Libeskind has been selected among two other renowned artists to design the Ohio Statehouse Holocaust Memorial in Columbus. The 18-foot tall memorial brushed stainless-steel memorial will be punctuated by the six-pointed Star of David and accompanied by a 40-foot walkway with words etched in limestone.

A completion date has yet to be established, as Richard H. Finan, chairman of the Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board believes a memorial with a Jewish religious symbol will be subject to legal challenges from the American Civil Liberties Union and other organizations because of the separation of church and state.

“If we get sued, it will be five years until this gets going,” Finan said, according to The Columbus Dispatch.

“I’m telling you you’re going to have a hard time getting this past the Capitol Square Board,” said Finan, who has opposed the idea of a Holocaust memorial since Gov. John Kasich proposed it more than a year ago.

The privately funded, $2 million memorial will be built south of the Ohio Statehouse on the grassy 10 acre Capitol Square, just east of the Scioto River.

via The Columbus Dispatch 

Libeskind Selected to Design Ohio Statehouse Holocaust Memorial originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 08 May 2013.

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Memorial to Victims of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos

Architects: Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Location: Mexico City, Mexico
Architect In Charge: Julio Gaeta, Luby Springall, Ricardo López
Area: 15,000 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos

The site is in Chapultepec, the most important park of Mexico City. This part of the forest belongs to the Federal Government and was under the custody of the Ministery of Defense of Mexico for many deacades; so first of all, the Memorial´s Project means the recuperation of  15,000 sqm in terms of public space.

A memorial is the architectural piece in which we can find the remembrance and the memory of the culture and history; in the particular case of the Memorial of the Victims of the Violence in Mexico, we materialize, in terms of architecture, one of the most important and current issues of Mexican society: violence. This is the big and open wound; in response to this, we propose an open project in the site, open to the city and open to the apropiation by the citizens; a project with a strong relationship with the city and her actors. The recuperation of the public space as well as the remembrance of the victims of violence are the essence of the project.

Our project plays the double condition of public space and memorial.

The first premise was to recognize the vocation of the site as a forest; with a very strong presence of nature; the trees are there and they characterize the site.

The violence is suggested in two dimensions: the void and the built.

The void proposed in the project is the space created between the steel walls and the trees. This void or empty space could remind us the concept of the no–presences and absenses of the people to remember, and the surfaces of the steel walls, rusty or mirroring, show that we can lose ourselves, add ourselves, or mutiply ourselves.

Besides that, if we think of violence as destruction, the construction of seventy steel walls plays as the great antidote against the violence .

The big projectual action consists on building seventy metalic walls in corten steel rising between the trees; it is a dual play between nature and architecture: the forest of trees and the forest of walls.  The society of the trees and the visitors play the living beings; the society of the walls play the unmateriality of the memories of the victims.

The list of materials is reduced: steel and concrete, added to the natural elements of the forest. We are using the corten steel in three ways: natural, rusty or stainless mirroring, each of them with different meanings. The rusty steel means the marks and scars that time makes in our lifetime. The stainless mirroring steel is used to reflect and multiply the living: persons, trees, and the water of the central space; and the natural steel is used as an unperturbed element that remind us the main and essential values that societies must keep to live in peace. Concrete is used for the lanes and the benches; for walking and reflection.

In the central space, which is the main space of the Memorial, there is a 1,200 spm fountain with an undetermined form and open geometry, to remind us that the violence issue is still opened. The fountain is covered with a grid so that the visitor can walk over the water. Water means life; water cleans, and water heals.

In this area the steel walls rise stronger and taller,  creating the strongest drama in the whole place. The reflection in the water of trees and walls make our eyes go up and down. When they go up, they see the sky, the light, the sun…the hope.

Finally, one of the most important parts of the project is the humanization and appropriation of the steel walls. Society is responsible for making the Memorial.  The seventy metallic walls are spaces for people to write the name of their victim, and express their pain, anger, and longings. These steel walls play as mirrors and blackboards, and by the writings, being transformed into witnesses of the pain and destruction provoked by the violence of the organized crime.

Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Courtesy of Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Plan
Memorial To Victims Of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos Site Plan

Memorial to Victims of Violence / Gaeta-Springall Arquitectos originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 Apr 2013.

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Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla / TEN Arquitectos

Architects: TEN Arquitectos
Location: Puebla, Mexico
Architect: Enrique Norten
Area: 6,711 sqm
Year: 2011
Photography: Patrick López Jaimes, Luis Gordoa, Pablo Crespo

In Puebla, a city of legends and immense cultural richness, we find a kaleidoscope of buildings, textures and interactions that blend to give us a mosaic of the contemporary culture of the city. Within this framework, to the northeast of the main square is a complex that groups various spaces for culture, education and recreation; this site houses the Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla.

Throughout history, monuments have been erected to remind new generations of past events that define current times. Commonly typified as sculptural objects, our proposal seeks to foment the relations between the continuity of public space and maximize the site, through the creation of plural spaces of coexistence, as well as by taking advantage of the views granted by the location.

Formally, the idea of the monument is abstracted to design a space that goes from the open to the enclosed, from the vertical sculpture to the horizontal; stimulating coexistence through the interstices that arise from the premeditated elevation of levels.

On one hand, within these interstices, the program is translated into a gallery of multiple uses that on the top becomes an amphitheater for various types of events. On the other hand, a play area is designed for everyone, from children to the elderly, to have a recreational space with shaded areas and urban furniture. A kiosk and a service area are proposed, where drinks and snacks can be sold.

An artificial resemblance of the original topography, the superposition of the top layer offers visitors a park with undulating movements that generate different environments. The surface is divided into garden areas, wooden deck and sandpits; this division allows for a multiplicity of uses.

Parallel to the project, the densely vegetated context becomes part of the proposal. The trees in the site lean in through perforations that allow them to coexist with the intervention.

As part of the sustainable strategies, three main issues are addressed within the project:

1. Rainwater is collected and stored in tanks for its use throughout the year. This ensures that the need for municipal water is minimized.

2. The drainage system is designed to recycle greywater for its use in toilets and irrigation. A system of filtration and water treatment will provide pure water for human consumption.

Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Site Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section

Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla / TEN Arquitectos originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 25 Mar 2013.

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Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla / TEN Arquitectos

Architects: TEN Arquitectos
Location: Puebla, Mexico
Architect: Enrique Norten
Area: 6,711 sqm
Year: 2011
Photography: Patrick López Jaimes, Luis Gordoa, Pablo Crespo

In Puebla, a city of legends and immense cultural richness, we find a kaleidoscope of buildings, textures and interactions that blend to give us a mosaic of the contemporary culture of the city. Within this framework, to the northeast of the main square is a complex that groups various spaces for culture, education and recreation; this site houses the Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla.

Throughout history, monuments have been erected to remind new generations of past events that define current times. Commonly typified as sculptural objects, our proposal seeks to foment the relations between the continuity of public space and maximize the site, through the creation of plural spaces of coexistence, as well as by taking advantage of the views granted by the location.

Formally, the idea of the monument is abstracted to design a space that goes from the open to the enclosed, from the vertical sculpture to the horizontal; stimulating coexistence through the interstices that arise from the premeditated elevation of levels.

On one hand, within these interstices, the program is translated into a gallery of multiple uses that on the top becomes an amphitheater for various types of events. On the other hand, a play area is designed for everyone, from children to the elderly, to have a recreational space with shaded areas and urban furniture. A kiosk and a service area are proposed, where drinks and snacks can be sold.

An artificial resemblance of the original topography, the superposition of the top layer offers visitors a park with undulating movements that generate different environments. The surface is divided into garden areas, wooden deck and sandpits; this division allows for a multiplicity of uses.

Parallel to the project, the densely vegetated context becomes part of the proposal. The trees in the site lean in through perforations that allow them to coexist with the intervention.

As part of the sustainable strategies, three main issues are addressed within the project:

1. Rainwater is collected and stored in tanks for its use throughout the year. This ensures that the need for municipal water is minimized.

2. The drainage system is designed to recycle greywater for its use in toilets and irrigation. A system of filtration and water treatment will provide pure water for human consumption.

Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Site Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section

Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla / TEN Arquitectos originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 25 Mar 2013.

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Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla / TEN Arquitectos

Architects: TEN Arquitectos
Location: Puebla, Mexico
Architect: Enrique Norten
Area: 6,711 sqm
Year: 2011
Photography: Patrick López Jaimes, Luis Gordoa, Pablo Crespo

In Puebla, a city of legends and immense cultural richness, we find a kaleidoscope of buildings, textures and interactions that blend to give us a mosaic of the contemporary culture of the city. Within this framework, to the northeast of the main square is a complex that groups various spaces for culture, education and recreation; this site houses the Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla.

Throughout history, monuments have been erected to remind new generations of past events that define current times. Commonly typified as sculptural objects, our proposal seeks to foment the relations between the continuity of public space and maximize the site, through the creation of plural spaces of coexistence, as well as by taking advantage of the views granted by the location.

Formally, the idea of the monument is abstracted to design a space that goes from the open to the enclosed, from the vertical sculpture to the horizontal; stimulating coexistence through the interstices that arise from the premeditated elevation of levels.

On one hand, within these interstices, the program is translated into a gallery of multiple uses that on the top becomes an amphitheater for various types of events. On the other hand, a play area is designed for everyone, from children to the elderly, to have a recreational space with shaded areas and urban furniture. A kiosk and a service area are proposed, where drinks and snacks can be sold.

An artificial resemblance of the original topography, the superposition of the top layer offers visitors a park with undulating movements that generate different environments. The surface is divided into garden areas, wooden deck and sandpits; this division allows for a multiplicity of uses.

Parallel to the project, the densely vegetated context becomes part of the proposal. The trees in the site lean in through perforations that allow them to coexist with the intervention.

As part of the sustainable strategies, three main issues are addressed within the project:

1. Rainwater is collected and stored in tanks for its use throughout the year. This ensures that the need for municipal water is minimized.

2. The drainage system is designed to recycle greywater for its use in toilets and irrigation. A system of filtration and water treatment will provide pure water for human consumption.

Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Luis Gordoa
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Pablo Crespo
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos © Patrick López Jaimes
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Site Plan
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Elevation
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section
Monumento Emblematico del 150 Aniversario de la Batalla de Puebla / TEN Arquitectos Section

Monument for the 150th Anniversary of the Battle of Puebla / TEN Arquitectos originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 25 Mar 2013.

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House Bill Proposes to Eliminate Funding for Eisenhower Memorial

The Dwight D. Eisenhower Memorial saga continues, as Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah) proposed legislation that would forego Frank Gehry’s controversial design and eliminate federal funding. Although Bishop’s radical bill would save $100 million in future funding, it ignores any possibility of compromise.

In response, the AIA stated:

“Representative Bishop’s legislation allows Congress to exercise governmental authority in a wholly arbitrary manner that negates the stated selection process. It is nothing more than an effort to intimidate the innovative thinking for which our profession is recognized at home and around the globe. We intend to vigorously oppose it.”

Since the commission’s selection of Gehry in 2010, opposition has grown exponentially, with strong criticism from Chicago investment manager and philanthropist Richard Driehaus, neo-traditionalist architect Leon Krier, the National Civic Art Society, the Eisenhower granddaughters and many others. Regardless, support for Gehry’s design has also grown, making compromise a seemingly viable option with Gehry admittedly open to change.

With an estimated price tag of $142 million, Gehry’s proposal features a triptych of sculptures and text with “heroic-scale” stone bas relief’s representing Eisenhower as a president, general and “barefoot boy from Kansas”. The sculptures are located within a lush pedestrianized park on the four-acre Eisenhower square, which is framed by a series of 25 meter-tall columns supporting a boarder of woven metal tapestries – one of the most criticized elements of the design.

via Architect Magazine, AIA  

House Bill Proposes to Eliminate Funding for Eisenhower Memorial originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 18 Mar 2013.

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