Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato features both faceted and bumpy facades

Faceted concrete blocks protrude from one side of this sports hall in Croatia, while its bumpy southern and western walls were made by casting concrete panels over a bed of stones (+ slideshow).

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Domagoj Blazevic

Designed by Croatian architect Idis Turato, the building is located in the small town of Krk, on the island of the same name, and it functions as both a sports hall for a primary school and an events space for the local community.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

The building sits within a new public square surrounded by a mixture of churches, monasteries and school buildings, and the architect created different concepts for each of the building’s elevations to correspond with the varying architectural styles.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Idis Turato

“One of the direct inspirations for all the facades and external walls of the hall were the existing walls of the surrounding monasteries,” Turato told Dezeen.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Domagoj Blazevic

“The wall is the main concept of the hall, being different regarding the context that is in front of it,” he continued. “Each one of those monastery walls, dating back from different periods, have different textures and also different sizes.”

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

The northern side of the building fronts the town square and features a faceted concrete surface with a terrazzo finish and sliced openings that form windows.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Ivan Dorotic

“The monoliths on the facade that face the square are monumental and dominant,” said the architect. “They accentuate the representative character of the newly formed large public square in town, and are a direct reply towards the high towers on the square.”

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Jure Zivkovic

The southern and western facades are built over the archeological remains of another monastery and a chapel, which were uncovered during the construction process. These dry stone walls informed the design of the new concrete elevations built on top, which were cast against small stones to create a textured surface that inverts the appearance of the existing structures.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

“These ‘concrete innards’, as we call them, are a negative of the dry stone walls,” explained Turato. “Our wish was to make contemporary but simple concrete prefabricates that are visually different and recognisable, but also blend in as a continuation of the existing walls and their textures.”

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Domagoj Blazevic

The remaining elevation faces the school and is finished in white render to match the appearance of its neighbour, which was designed by Idis Turato a few years earlier.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Domagoj Blazevic

The interior of the building is decorated in bold colours that stand out against the raw concrete interior. A first-floor balcony provides seating during matches and events, plus an underground tunnel creates a private route into the school.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

Slabs of red terrazzo provide the surface of the surrounding square, intended to contrast with the pale colour of the concrete walls.

Here’s a project description from Turato Architecture:


Sports Hall and Public Square in Krk

One of the main focuses of the Turato Architects’ Hall and Square project in Krk was to finish an architectural dialogue started way back in 2005, when Idis Turato completed an elementary school, Fran Krsto Frankopan (with his former studio “Randić Turato”).

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Ivan Dorotic

The new hall, which opened shortly before the summer of 2013, is situated in the very vicinity of the above-mentioned school, just across a narrow pedestrian street. The completion of the new sports building and public square was a crown achievement of the architect’s quest to complete an integral urban ensemble on top of Krk’s old town, thereby creating a newly defined focal point of high importance.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Ivan Dorotic

The newly built hall, aside from being a gym facility for the school pupils – who can now easily access it through an underground corridor – aims to meet demands of the local community as well, housing sports events as well as future cultural activities and public festivities on a larger scale. This is the reason why the north-eastern corner of the hall’s facade opens up onto the square, providing functional continuity of passing through and enabling them to become almost one.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Ivan Dorotic

The school-hall-square assembly is surrounded by several churches and monasteries, as well as by two tall church towers that act as the square’s vertical accents. Together, they all define and describe this wide public space, which, depending on occasion, can function both as a secular and an ecclesiastical pedestrian zone.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

On the very site of the new hall there used to be an old student dorm, which had been used in past as a gym facility for the school. Prior to the hall construction it had to be demolished. The demolition, however, unearthed several new and important archaeological discoveries on the site, thus creating a whole new context for the hall itself.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Jure Zivkovic

All that had been found on the site had to be preserved as discovered. The architects took this fact to be crucial in redefining the concept according to the new input. This affected directly the very organisational scheme of the project. The excavated and preserved church and monastery walls were to become integral parts of the new building, with new walls and facades of the hall emerging directly from the restored, older ones.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

Yet another contextual element was important in forming the shape and size of the building. These are the high walls, seen throughout the old town of Krk, especially around the aforementioned monasteries, enclosing the town lots, lining the narrow streets of the town. These site-specific structures surround the hall itself as well.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Domagoj Blazevic

Behind these walls different stories are taking place daily, balancing between the public and the private, depending on the usage of the space enclosed. The high walls of the western hall facade, next to the Franciscan monastery, are then but a continuation of these town alleys. This is where the story of the walls, their origin, context and their shape began, resulting in variety of the facade walls, formally corresponding to the context, input and location.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Ivan Dorotic

Although seemingly set “back”, on secondary surfaces (the western alley and southern facade), the most recognisable and by far the most unique element of the hall itself is a wall consisting of original and striking prefabricated concrete elements. The architect named these the innards due to their origin and their fabrication, and the ambiguity of the impression they leave upon the viewer, due to a formal factor of its (un)attractiveness.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

The innards are in fact unique precast elements produced as a negative of a dry stone wall, or more precisely – made by placing stones in a wooden mould, covering them with a PVC foil and pouring concrete over it all. In this way the negative of the stones forms the “face” of the precast element. This inverse building process, a simple and basic fabrication with a distinct visual impact, is an invention of the hall’s author. It happened as a result of researching simple building materials with a crafty bricklayer, with whom the architect had collaborated on several projects in the past as well.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Jure Zivkovic

On the other hand, the most representative facade of the hall, the one visually dominating the square, is the facade constructed out of six impressively large concrete monoliths, weighing up to 23 tons. The monolithic blocks are finished off with a layer of ‘terrazzo’, which is an ancient technique usually used for floor finishes, requiring hours of polishing by hand.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Domagoj Blazevic

Here, however, the terrazzo is redefined and used vertically, fittingly renamed into a “vertical terrazzo”. While this sudden vertical use of the finish creates a shiny and finely shaded facade, its “normal” use, on horizontal surfaces, is recontextualised and rethought once again, since this finish, usually ‘reserved’ for interiors, is now used for exterior surfaces of the public square.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

The red colour of the square’s terrazzo floor panels is in contrast to the lightness of the hall’s facade. Its smoothness and slip-resistance is achieved by application of a layer of epoxy after polishing.

Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Photograph by Sandro Lendler

The fourth facade, facing the school, with its formal look and finish (done in plaster lime mortar) confirms that the new building remains in a direct communication with the existing educational facility, sharing its function.

3D concept diagram of Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
3D concept diagram – click for larger image
Site plan of Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Site plan – click for larger image
Ground floor plan of Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
First floor plan of Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
First floor plan – click for larger image
Section one of Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Cross section – click for larger image
Section two of Concrete-clad sports hall by Idis Turato with both faceted and bumpy facades
Long section – click for larger image

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features both faceted and bumpy facades
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Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

The trend for extreme cantilevers continues with this house in Croatia by architect Idis Turato, where one floor dramatically overhangs the other.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Nest and Cave House overlooks the sea in the Opatija Riviera, where houses typically follow a vernacular style with gabled profiles and clay roof tiles, but Idis Turato wanted to create a building with more of a dominance over the hillside.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

“The main question is how to control the space encompassed; and subsequently how to develop selective control of encompassed space,” Turato says, explaining his concept to frame parts of the landscape using architecture.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

The irregular angle of the cantilever divides the two storeys of the house into two distinct volumes. The ground floor is a rugged concrete building set into the lawn, while the steel frame of the upper level is coated with white cladding panels that help to create a lightweight structure.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

An angled chimney acts as a lightwell for a central staircase, which sits at the meeting point of the two floors and connects living and dining rooms on the top floor with bedrooms downstairs.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

We recently published proposals for a wine museum that projects from the side of a mountain, which prompted a few readers to question if cantilevers are old news.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Other cantilevers we’ve featured include a periscope-like office building and a museum at a Celtic burial mound.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

See all our stories about cantilevers »

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Here’s a project description from architect Iva Marčetić:


Nest and Cave House
Idis Turato

The hinterland of the Opatija Riviera in Croatia is dotted with villas (built within a century and a half). Their upper, front side reveals nothing but entrances beyond which we can only imagine their spaciousness.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Their scale and relation to the bay are entirely dependent on the seafront slope (perhaps, it is the tension arising from the assumption of something hidden what gives the spatial frame of Opatija’s hinterland its appeal).

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Although the Nest and Cave remains typologically and morphologically true to the surrounding space as a whole, it develops its “hidden” side through the dialectics of domination over and subordination to the landscape.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

So, the house and the place it renders are not structured solely by the slope onto which they are built (as it is the case with most villas in Opatija). Instead, it actively constructs the landscape and intertwines with it by laying down the ground level (landscape) and by placing on it an upper object which hovers above as a displaced level.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Therefore, the house consists of an entrenched concrete bunker (the sleeping area) on which a steel spatial grid structure is placed and which elongates into a 17 meter long console.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Despite it being constructed within a reductive registry of functions, with only two structural elements and with its apparent division into the sleeping and living area, the house creates a wondrous, ever shifting experience and interspaces.

This is achieved by a simple dislocation of the upper segment in relation to the lower one and by inscribing it into the depth of the parcel.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: entrance axo diagrams – click above for larger image

The dislocated upper part and its hypertrophic console express, by alternating the shadow and the hidden with openness and hospitality, the quintessential tension of a Mediterranean house: the battle of the sun and the shadow. The Nest and Cave house becomes a reinterpretation of its heritage by achieving a full form via projecting the object (the shadow) and opening the void in the body (landscape).

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: space usage plan diagrams – click above for larger image

The console leaves behind a shadow which (depending on the time of day) gives volume to the living area (“the heart of the house”, as the author calls it) and, by alternating the intersection of its axes (as much as the angle of the sun will allow it), it shifts around thus constantly creating yet another intimate area of the house.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: lower level plan – click above for larger image

Through its fenestration facing away from the road and surrounding structures and by carefully framing the landscape that penetrates and dictates the depth or flatness of the interior, the visually (and statically) dominant white shape (the aluminum covered steel grid) invites the Kvarner Bay inside.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: upper level plan – click above for larger image

Idis Turato, the architect, having to face such a dominant landscape, attempts to explain his raison d’être behind it in the words of Buckminster Fuller,: “(…) The main question is how to control the space compassed; and subsequently how to develop selective control of compassed space (…)” How to simultaneously capture broadness, enable intimacy, while continuously standing on the edge in front of unobstructed views?

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: roo plan – click above for larger image

The object dominates over the landscape, while the landscape creates the interiority of the object – a continuous interchange between the frame and what is being framed, the house on the edge. Its strict geometry and sculptural attributes (the architect’s control) provide a necessary foundation for a future narrative (its alternations depending on the viewpoint). They also maintain spatial relations just accurately enough to assure a possibility of an unforeseen event (such as freedom in linearity of enfilade).

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: section – click above for larger image

The view of the house and the view from the house are in a constant clash of inclusion and exclusion. Beneath someone’s nest and cave we are able to observe the sculptural relationship between the landscape and the house (the other place).

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: section – click above for larger image

On the other hand, when being inside it, we become beneficiaries of witnessing the subliminal beauty enabled by the controlled landscape frames – carefully planned axes and angles successfully separate the “initial resources from the final product” *.

Nest and Cave House by Idis Turato

Above: section – click above for larger image

The control over a spatial frame allows for “passionate uncertainties of thought”, regardless of whether we are the observers or the users and of which story we are telling.

 

The post Nest and Cave House
by Idis Turato
appeared first on Dezeen.