Posts tagged spain

30 Dwellings in Manresa / nothing architecture | ArchDoc

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© Hisao SuzikiArchitects: nothing architecture - Joan Ramon Pascuets, Monica Mosset Location: Barcelona, Spain Project area: 4,500 sqm Project year: 2005 – 2009 Photographs: Hisao Suzuki © Hisao SuzikiThe dwellings are organized by a flexible and multifunctional form about a central core of baths that allows natural crossed ventilation while transverse views of the house. A second skin of translucent white laminated glass in south facade works as a solar filter generating qualified intermediate, luminous, ethereal spaces… agreeable and comfortable. His first totally glazed skin slips from being a limit to become an extension from the interior towards the exterior.main elevationA communicative building with and unitary treatment but simultaneously neutral, superposes the successive skins generating multiple and changeable reflections of unexpected opaqueness creating atmospheric effect… frivolously and vaporous… reflections on the white glass of the sky, the clouds, the sun… extreme delicacy, formal austerity, rigor, eco efficiency, prefabrication, efficiency, exclusion of everything superfluous, purity, neutrality, absence, emptiness, silence, fluency, to non-be, absence of architecture, nothing , to develop imperceptibly.© Hisao SuzikiThe building is organized by two communications center that serve two and three apartments per floor. To achieve the area there are two typologies, one oriented north-south with bathrooms in the centre and the other one faced to one facade with water area located inside. The first one has crossed ventilation through opposite fronts, while the second one also have transverse ventilation with perpendicular facades.#gallery-1 {margin: auto;}#gallery-1 .gallery-item {float: left;margin-top: 10px;text-align: center;width: 33%;}#gallery-1 img {border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;}#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {margin-left: 0;}

Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
Block 30 Dwellings / nothing architecture © Hisao Suziki
© Hisao Suziki
floor plan floor plan
floor plan
ground floor plan ground floor plan
ground floor plan
main elevation main elevation
main elevation
east elevation east elevation
east elevation

* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.

Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos | ArchDoc

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© Fernanado AldaArchitects: Donaire Arquitectos / Juan Pedro Donaire Barbero Location: Almería, Spain Client: E.P.P.A. y Consejería de Obras Públicas de la Junta de Andalucía Collaboration: Ignacio Núñez Bootello, Carmela Domínguez Asencio, Tibisay Cañas Fuentes, Beatriz Hacar Hernández, Juan Vega Espinar, Delia Pacheco Donaire, Jesús Núñez Bootello Project Year: 2009 Project Area: 504 sqm Photographs: Fernanado Alda, Enrique Bejines M The building is located in the Port of Roquetas de Mar, in Almería, Spain. The projects objectives were to integrate the building into its surroundings, creating a new area that responds to a landscape dominated by different levels and materials. It is a landscape of great value with the Mediterranean as the background.© Enrique BejinesThe Port’s concrete was used as the main material to contrast with the Board’s wood, establishing the main line of work. A fragmented building responds to the different uses required. Between the administration and reception areas is a covered area that leads to the the end of the quay. A band of white concrete wraps around the exterior and unifies the different areas, creating a focal point for the port.© Enrique Bejines#gallery-1 {margin: auto;}#gallery-1 .gallery-item {float: left;margin-top: 10px;text-align: center;width: 33%;}#gallery-1 img {border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;}#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {margin-left: 0;}

Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Enrique Bejines
© Enrique Bejines
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Enrique Bejines
© Enrique Bejines
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Enrique Bejines
© Enrique Bejines
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Enrique Bejines
© Enrique Bejines
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Enrique Bejines
© Enrique Bejines
Floor Plans Floor Plans
Floor Plans
Elevation and Section Elevation and Section
Elevation and Section
Rendering Rendering
Rendering
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda
Office and Service Building / Donaire Arquitectos © Fernanado Alda
© Fernanado Alda

* Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.

Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory / Luis Machuca & Associates | ArchDoc

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Courtesy of Luis Machuca & AssociatesLocated in a national landmark, the proposal for the Interpretation Center of Andalusian Prehistory by Luis Machuca Associates strengthens and takes care of this feature by its presence on the existing territory. The object of their design was that the other landmark, the museum and the park, could be distinguished from their immediate environment, both during the day and at night. More images and architects’ description after the break.Courtesy of Luis Machuca & AssociatesThe design does not prevent us from integrating the museum into the hillside, adapting it to the place both in formal characteristics and in the choice of materials that make up the building’s skin. The topography of the park should be hardly modified by the new building, just so much as it makes possible exploring it comfortably.Courtesy of Luis Machuca & AssociatesArchaeological parkThe proposal creates new pathways and flowerbeds and the roads have concrete pavement to straightedge the land where it is necessary. Meanwhile, in other areas, recycled wood will be laid down, with the sensation as if they were floating over the field. The paths at some areas convert into viewpoints from that the visitors can have a special view on the landscape.Courtesy of Luis Machuca & AssociatesOutside routesThrough this design, people can feel like being in a cave while outside of the building, because if we pass under the piece that attempts to settle on one of the entrance zones, we arrive to a courtyard that is partly covered by the building. Here, we had the opportunity to create a close-to-nature resting zone.Courtesy of Luis Machuca & AssociatesThe open auditorium has been integrated into the museum building as part of the very characteristic topography of the site, and it also helps to shape the above described court. As it is well protected by its own shape, it also has very good acoustic features.Courtesy of Luis Machuca & AssociatesMuseum routesThe visitors arriving at the lobby get to the upper floor by a lift or taking the stairs, and from this place descending on a gentle slope, make the museum route until they arrive to the lobby again. In the final section, there is a temporary exhibition hall, which could be the beginning of the route, or be operated autonomously. The museum can also be discovered from the opposite direction due to its bow shape, because the two ends join by the elevator and the staircase.Architect: Luis Machuca & Associates Architect and director: Luis Machuca Santa-Cruz Architects: Luis Machuca, María Machuca, Manuel Rodríguez Architect-Museology: León Carlos Álvarez Lda. bellas artes, museology: Miriam Díaz Lda. bellas artes museology, scenography: Blanca Machuca Archaeology-museology: María del Mar Espejo Museology INGHO engineers: Pedro Cantalejo Quantity surveyor-architect: José Manuel Caro Architecture students: Eszter Berecz, Ana García, Rafael Gimbel#gallery-1 {margin: auto;}#gallery-1 .gallery-item {float: left;margin-top: 10px;text-align: center;width: 33%;}#gallery-1 img {border: 2px solid #cfcfcf;}#gallery-1 .gallery-caption {margin-left: 0;}

Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Courtesy of Luis Machuca & Associates
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory park
park
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory plan 01
plan 01
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory plan 02
plan 02
Interpretation Center of the Andalusian Prehistory section
section
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