Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

A raw concrete house in Alicante by Spanish studio Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos becomes the scene for a string of mysterious murders in this series of images by photographer Luis Diaz Diaz (+ slideshow).

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos designed the two-storey Casa Baladrar as a holiday house in the Spanish town of Benissa, but Luis Diaz Diaz chose to photograph the building as is it were a crime scene, rather than an attractive tourist destination.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

“Every time I take pictures of houses I think about all of the things that could happen inside,” Diaz Diaz told Dezeen. “Many things happen in the life of a house, sometimes good sometimes bad; it can be robbed, or there could be a big party. So a house is the perfect place for creating a fantasy.”

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

One image features a man slumped over the mint-green frame of one of the house’s many large windows, while another features a woman lying behind a sofa on the terracotta tiles of the living room floor.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

“I wanted to create a contrast between the clarity of the architectural lines of the house and these kind of weird events,” explained the photographer.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

These architectural lines include a series of faceted ceilings that angle back and forth through the open-plan living room and kitchen, which occupies the house’s upper floor.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

Architect María Langarita said they added these details to mimic the rugged topography that links the house with the sea. “We wanted a way to inhabit this rocky landscape,” she told Dezeen.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

A series of bedrooms are located on the level below. Like the living room, each one can be opened out to surrounding terraces by sliding back glass doors and perforated metal shutters.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

“Our goal was to make a very open house, so when the windows are open they disappear completely behind these lively green lattices and you don’t see any glass,” said Langarita.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

Matching green glass tiles cover some of the lower walls. There’s also a swimming pool wrapping around part of the perimeter, which is depicted containing a body face-down.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

Here’s a project description from Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos:


Casa Baladrar

The scattered and trans-European city that the mountainous coast of Alicante has become, houses a heterogeneous population that is drawn to the sun, the sea, the temperate climate, the convenient public services and the leafy greenery.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

The promise of relaxing and hedonistic experiences captivates both seasonal tourists and long-term residents who see their expectations fulfilled amongst jasmine and bougainvilleas. The project draws from this context and is designed to meet the demands of multiple families in the summertime and as a haven for retirees the rest of the year.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

The house rests on terraces that were once used for farming, which resolve the steep gradient of the terrain. The plot’s sloping nature means that there are some spectacular views of the sea from its upper reaches, while the lower portion looks over a wooded stream bed that carries water into a pebble-strewn cove.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

The house takes advantage of the views and the breeze and makes the most of the uneven terrain and vegetation for the creation of small areas where activities can take place simultaneously, day and night. The existing trees were preserved and new species added in an effort to conquer the promising exuberance of local flora.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

The interior spaces are arranged in a cascade, with common areas on the upper floor adjoining the terraces with their views, and bedrooms on the lower floor with access to the garden and swimming pool. The detail proposed for the openings eliminates all presence of glass when they are drawn back, transforming the house into an enormous porch that provides continuity between outside and inside activities.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

The building uses the thermal inertia of the concrete and stone to its advantage, combining it with the lightness of the avocado green latticework and the glass tiles to create a cool and well-ventilated atmosphere. The house’s geometry and mineral quality reflect the impressive Peñón de Ifach and respond to a desire for time travel, with a minimum amount of maintenance.

Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene

Project: Casa Baladrar
Location: Benissa, Alicante
Architects: María Langarita and Víctor Navarro
Collaborators: Marta Colón, Roberto González, Juan Palencia
Structures: Mecanismo S.L.
Date: September 2009
Client: Private

Site plan of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
Site plan – click for larger image
Ground floor of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
First floor plan – click for larger image
Roof plan of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
Roof plan plan – click for larger image
Long section of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
Long section – click for larger image
Cross section of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
Cross section – click for larger image
North elevation of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
North elevation – click for larger image
South elevation of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
South elevation – click for larger image
Axonometric diagram of Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro photographed as a crime scene
Axonometric diagram – click for larger image

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photographed as a crime scene
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House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

This bright-white house in Alicante by Spanish studio Fran Silvestre Arquitectos features an 18-metre-long balcony that stretches out towards the Balearic Sea (+ slideshow + movie).

Fran Silvestre Arquitectos designed the structure as a single monolithic volume that nestles against the rockface whilst also projecting out towards the shoreline.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Living rooms and bedrooms are contained within the protruding upper storey and offer panoramic views through an entirely glazed facade.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

A staircase climbs through and across an exterior wall to connect these rooms with an infinity pool and terrace.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Concrete was used for the entire structure, but the walls were coated in stucco to create the clean white aesthetic.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The architects explain how they always try to design houses around the habits of future residents. ”Dialogue is always present, since the work becomes part of the identity of those who inhabit it,” they explain. “This dialogue seeks comfort and also utility, and examines the conflicts and joys of daily acts of human life.”

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Others houses by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos that we’ve featured include a residence where all the rooms are on show and a wedge-shaped house that thrusts out from a rock face.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

See more Spanish houses on Dezeen, including a house with four hovering concrete wings.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Photography is by Diego Opazo, movie is by Alfonso Calza.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Here’s a project description from Fran Silvestre Arquitectos:


House on the Cliff
Calpe, Alicante.

We like the virtue of architecture which makes possible constructing a house on air, walking on water…
An abrupt plot of land overlooking the sea, where what is best is to do nothing. It invites to stay.
A piece that respects the land’s natural contour is set in it.
Above, a shadow, the house itself, looking calmly at the Mediterranean.
Under the sun, the swimming-pool brings us closer to the sea, it becomes a quiet cove.
In the inflection point, the stairway proposes a evocative path, a garden in the basement…

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Due to the steepness of the plot and the desire to contain the house in just one level, a three-dimensional structure of reinforced concrete slabs and screens adapting to the plot’s topography was chosen, thus minimizing the earthwork.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

This monolithic, stone-anchored structure generates a horizontal platform from the accessing level, where the house itself is located.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The swimming-pool is placed on a lower level, on an already flat area of the site.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The concrete structure is insulated from the outside and then covered by a flexible and smooth white lime stucco.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

The rest of materials, walls, pavements, the gravel on the roof… all maintain the same colour, respecting the traditional architecture of the area, emphasizing it and simultaneously underlining the unity of the house.

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Architecture: Fran Silvestre Arquitectos
Project team: Fran Silvestre, María José Sáez – Principals in charge
Maria Masià, Adrián Mora, Jordi Martínez José V. Miguel – Collaborating architects

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Structural engineer: David Gallardo | UPV
Building engineer: Vicente Ramos, Esperanza Corrales, Javier Delgado

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Interior design: ALFARO HOFMANN
Collaborators: Fran Ayala, Ángel Fito
Contractor: Construcciones Alabort

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Location: Toix Mascarat, Calpe, Alicante

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Site area: 962,84 sq m
Built area: 242,00 sq m

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Cost: (P.E.M.) 650.000 euros

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: lower floor plan – click above for larger image

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: middle floor plan – click above for larger image

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: upper floor plan – click above for larger image

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: roof plan – click above for larger image

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: cross section one – click above for larger image

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: cross section two – click above for larger image

House on the Cliff by Fran Silvestre Arquitectos

Above: cross section three – click above for larger image

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Fran Silvestre Arquitectos
appeared first on Dezeen.

Veras Leather Alicante

Questa è la versione in pelle della Veras Alicante. In vendita tipo qui.

Veras Leather Alicante

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Spanish architects Cor & Asociados have completed a pearlescent music hall in a village near Alicante.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Shimmering porcelain tiles clad the multi-purpose auditorium, which adjoins converted civil guards quarters to comprise the new two-storey music centre.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Staircases encased within glass boxes link the existing U-shaped building to the extension.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The new block encloses a central courtyard for open-air music rehearsals.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Layered screens create overlapping fins on the interior walls of the auditorium, which are backlit in stripes.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Another recent project to feature ceramic tiles was a library with a mosaic rainbow at its centre – see the story here.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Photography is by David Frutos.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The following text was written by Cor & Asociados:


Music Hall and House in Algueña MUCA
Cor & Asociados. Miguel Rodenas + Jesús Olivares

The memory of existing architecture and the opportunity of a new program. Algueña is a small village in the interior of Alicante County, with a population of two thousand and an economy based in agriculture and marble industries.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

We were asked for a building able to bring together all the activities related to music and culture that took place in the village, and also promoting its cultural future. We were commissioned to search for an opportunity, articulate it and carry it out. Under these circumstances, that also comprised the definition of an extensive musical schedule of activities and a maximum budget of 562.800 €, we proposed in a first phase the rehabilitation of old Guardia Civil’s quarter that was in disuse since the 80s.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

That allowed us to have a surface area of 670 m2 that we only had to adequate, and the construction on a new Auditorium of 350m2 and 230 seats. In a second phase, we proposed the construction of a park with an open-air auditorium that will join the village and its zone of future urban development. The definition of the architectural program is the opportunity in this project.  Sometimes, as in this case, the decisions of the architects have to do more with the “building of an opportunity” and the creation of a dense and appropriate schedule of activities for the village, than strictly with the discipline, the aesthetics, the materiality, the form…

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The intervention is located in the west entrance to the village, near from classical local wineries, in a city limit that the new urbanistic plan will develop around this plot. We propose to reserve a green zone beside the building, to develop in second phase an open-air auditorium and a garden with jacarandas, that will have enough entity to separate the new urbanistic development of the existing one, and generating a joining place and giving it ambiental quality. The responsibility in the approach and the impossibility of failing are important parameters in this kind of villages, where the opportunities come rarely, and there’s no possibility of increasing the budget. That’s why it is very important to construct a complex reality linked closely with the village, and auditing the process with all the agents and citizens involved.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Besides, in the plot exits a building of the 60s, an old Guardia Civil quarters, that is in disuse from years and that has a load-bearing wall structure in good state of maintenance. And its shaped in U with an interesting central courtyard for this architectural program. We propose to rehabilitate it for developing that program. The new construction is separated from the old by new adapted stairs that are enclosed in glass boxes lighted from overhead, that try to add fragility to the rotundness of the whole. The multipurpose hall houses 230 seats, these seats are moveable and the installations are able to accommodate different kind of functions, from a concert to a new year’s eve party, that’s why it also houses a warehouse where organize all these elements that allow use change.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The central courtyard is designed to house the rehearsals of the music band in open-air, or any other kind of functions as award giving parties, etc. without any fixed element. Moreover, it’s designed together with the back courtyard, in which we propose to develop another open-air hall. The intervention has a great potential to be used and we propose more for less. In the existing building we propose the rehabilitation without formal changes. Simply recovering all the old constructive techniques and turning them white with different grades of shine with the intention of generating tension between what the users remember about the building and what it is now, we search for surprise perceptions and the generation of a new surface. Instead the new hall is a blind box, a strange element because of its shape and dimensions. To emphasize this sensation we propose a cladding that vibrates and shines with a pearly-iridescent material.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The generation of a “low cost” landmark: vibration and brightness

The generation of this recognizable landmark, architecturally speaking, usually has to do with expensive budgets, amazing materials and sculptured shapes. However, this project generates this landmark with a low cost solution relying on two concepts, one concerns “psychology of perception” and uses vibration and brightness, and the other concerns shape and uses the rotund appearance with proportions similar to its industrial landscape. Brand architecture is used in big cities to offer a recognizable image that can be easily remembered and associated to a city and its values.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

Using this kind of marketing at village level has to be reflected, because they only need a building for a determinate program. Here it allows starting sketching a strategy to reactivate the exterior image of the village, and helping strengthen it for the imminent economical change it’s immersed.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The ceramic: pearly and iridescent

The use of a ceramic surfacing with pearly and iridescent finishing responds the intention of generating a vibrant volume in constant change, due to lighting changes o observatory movements, this solution makes the building vibrate, changing its colour, saturation and profundity.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The bet on this material, made “exnovo” for this building, with the use of existing techniques of firing, vitrifying and metals deposition, give this appearance and respond to the necessity of not creating a tectonic or shape solution, but a perceptive one.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

This technique is based on a porcelain base material that resists frost and is guaranteed in exterior. Each of these plates is pressed in dry and is fired 3 times: first of them at 950ºC to biscuit it, second to fire the white enamel and vitrifying the biscuit at 1180ºC in rapid cicle, and third that obtains the iridescent-pearly finishing or the metal reflections at 780ºC approximately. The opportunity of the project is the creation of an architectural program audited with the village. For many years music is an important part of the culture in Algueña. This building is the opportunity to bring together in a same space all the activities that are spread through the village.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The program departs form music realm and we lead it to a more indeterminate situation, linked to multipurpose uses.After doing the work of defining the architectural programs, that we developed in multiple meetings with different agents and citizens, the building houses a wide range of activities form music lessons, rehearsals and concerts of the municipal music band, the “rondalla” and choir, lessons and performances of the regional dance group, the “dolçaina and tabalet” group, rock bands, composition workshops and electronic music lessons; to exhibition rooms, conference rooms, assembly rooms, place to hold popular feasts, and even a municipal warehouse.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The music as social enhancer in a village

Music bands are a great valencian tradition because in almost every village and town it exists at least one of these musical groups. The musical quality of these bands is recognized around the world, some of them reaching more than 125 members.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

These groups are not only cultural entities but also social, with a high degree of participation in the village that goes far beyond the music and concerns social integration, formation and group work. Algueña’s band is a good example of this. Each event or concert, and even the rehearsals are followed by the people; not only the results (concerts) are appreciated but also the process (rehearsals, auditions, lessons, meetings) are shared. As an example: as they have few cultural events, people assists to weekly rehearsals of the band.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

As a result, in the Comunidad Valenciana exists a network of bands and music centers that are the birthplace of internationally prestigious musicians. This encouraged the creation in 1968 of the Musical Societies Federation of the Comunidad Valenciana. Its aim is to promote and spread the love, teaching and practice of music and enhancing associationism and allowing society a mean of cultural development. In Europe, the Comunidad Valenciana is the region where more music bands exist with Austria and Holland.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

The historical marc of the building. Working with collective memories.

When you decide to work in an existing building with a profound historical mark, so profound as can be in a Guardia Civil quarter and checkpoint, it’s commonly assumed that one of the challenges of the project will be erasing that historical mark.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

To do so we developed with the Art Agency “La Ballena Imantada”, directed by Luisa Martí, a social and artistic event in the building: “60 glances” whose objective was to take 60 artists paint during a day each one of the jambs and lintels of the doors and windows.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

We generated a “transcendent social act” that brought together more than 500 people around the building among artists, musicians, spectators, familiars,.. allowing us to show the building while still in construction and start to weave a consensus atmosphere between the citizenship, detaching authorship and leave the building up to its future users.

Music Hall and House in Algueña by Cor & Asociados

This work concerning sociology and anthropology is vital in this project to provoke a shift in the collective memories.


See also:

.

Library by Török és
Balázs Építészeti
Theatre in Almonte
by Donaire Arquitectos
Museum of Energy
by Arquitecturia

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Spanish studio Cor have completed this Alicante bar with floors and walls clad in wood.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

The upper half of the walls and ceiling are white, imprinted with rows of black dots.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

The bar lines one side of the space and seating is on the opposite side.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Photographs are by David Frutos.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Also by Cor: Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor
More restaurants and bars on Dezeen »

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

All our interior stories »
More Spanish architecture on Dezeen »

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Here’s some more information from Cor:


26 Lounge Bar

The Portal de Elche has been a very popular meeting place in Alicante for centuries, situated at the corner of the Rambla and the Esplanade of Spain the two most important streets of the city. It was an urban space emerged on the occasion of the demolition of the walls that gripped the city.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

In this place, was placed the Tower of San Bartolomé and beside it a door that had several names: Portal de Murcia, Portal de Orihuela and, of course, Portal de Elche. At present, it is possibly one of the busiest places in the city center. The proposal of our team was to create a ‘commercial and emotional window’: a place where looking and being looked beneath the huge ficus on the ‘portal’, which would generate a stable emotional link that made customers come back.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

‘From inside you look outside.’ An ancient interior wounded by multiple reforms, from a tavern to a shoe store, through a thousand different businesses from s. XIX brought out an uneven volume. Given this situation we propose the construction of a ‘controlled interior volume’ able to suit lighting, temperature and acoustic sensation.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Built with two faced ’u’s: one made of industrial timber that fits on the floor, at the bar and forms the bench going up to 1.8 m height, and another punched ’u’ completely white, descending from the ceiling where all facilities (air conditioning and sound) are accommodated. These ‘u’ are crossed in a weightless way by two adjustable light sets that bathe the room from its center, and try to emphasize and define the interior space, letting perceive ‘a box within a very old local’.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Click for larger image

A phenomenological project. The states of light are very important due to temporary uses and change on supplies depending on the time of day. Say it is not an area that changes depending on the time, but rather different premises, where different scenarios are set, almost like a stage. Ground lighting takes all its power at night, diminishing its intensity wallwashers and the two great lamps, getting a room similar to the bistros of W. Allen.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Click for larger image

In contrast, in the morning are the two great lamps that catch the spotlight, making appear clearly defined spatial boundaries, something that reminds the photography of Slawomir Idziak.

26 Lounge Bar by Cor

Click for larger image

Project Outline

Architecture : COR Consulting of Creative Resources
Client: Private
Location: Alicante, Spain
Principal Use : Cafe, lounge and bar
Floor Area: 110 square meters
Budget: 91.050 €


See also:

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D’espresso by
Nemaworkshop
Switch Restaurant by
Karim Rashid
Barrio North by
Anarchitect

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

This funeral home in Alicante, Spain, is by Spanish studio Cor.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Called Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso, the building has been arranged around four courtyard areas and sits in a landscaped garden featuring 29 Japanese maples.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

The garden rises up to meet the building’s roof at one end.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Full-height glazing wrapping the courtyards permit sight lines between different areas of the building.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Photographs are by David Frutos.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

More stories on death »

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

More Spanish architecture on Dezeen »

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Funeral home and garden in Pinoso (Alicante, Spain)

A public building in a crisis country. The fear of death is considered wise, without being, since it is believed to know about what you do not know.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

“Death is perhaps the greatest blessing of human beings, no one knows, and yet everyone is fears as if he knew with absolute certainty that the worst of evils” (Socrates, 470 BC, 399 BC)

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Historically we find different definitions of death that we demonstrate how this concept has moved from positions closer to the darkness, pain and fear, into positions related to the concept of sadness, change and light.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Designing a building where you’ll find, perhaps, the least known stage of human existence necessarily involves the assumption of uncertainty as a concept to include in the process of ideation.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

We understand this building as a place that will resist being forgotten, left in the retinas of their users, and therefore a place where the sensitive has to be controlled.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Parameters such as sound, temperature, light, humidity, lighting, privacy, relationship with nature take great importance.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

The plot is situated on the outskirts of town, at the end of a cul-de-sac, close to the municipal sports centre and behind a cultural centre, both of great activity.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

This creates some urban tension, since the building is in the middle of various activities incompatible.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

In this situation it is proposed to order the mattress assembly plant generating sufficient identity to establish itself as ‘centre’ of all these public buildings and activities.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

We have created a forest of 29 Japanese maples, able to articulate, differentiate and limit the variety of uses.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Additionally, the building is buried in the back, and as if it was a cave, its main facade eaves the field forward, what prevents glances between buildings and various activities.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

It is for this reason that the building is set around five holes in the form of courtyard or ‘bitten space’, which allow the relationship with the outside world is controlled and there is no interaction.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

From the interior you only can see the sky and the inside.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

The interior-exterior permeability becomes very important in this new town site.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

A public building in a crisis country.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

We must not forget the effort that contains behind this building.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

The project has a 495 square meters and a budget of 431,583€, which involves a considerable effort to finding solutions building techniques, systems maintenance to cost reduction, and maximum degree of ecological adaptation and sustainability at the landscape level.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

This is an intervention that gives more for less.

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Credit Information
Architecture : COR Consulting of Creative Resources

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Project Outline
Client – Town Council of Pinoso, Alicante

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Location: Alicante, Spain

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Principal Use : Public Building, Funeral home

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Click for larger image

Floor Area: 495 square meters

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Click for larger image

Budget – 431.583 €

Funeral Home and Garden in Pinoso by Cor

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Rennes Métropole Crematorium by Plan01Ortona Cemetery by
Giovani Vaccarini
Family Tomb by
Pedro Dias