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

The post Concrete house by Langarita-Navarro
photographed as a crime scene
appeared first on Dezeen.

Medialab-Prado by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Spanish studio Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos has created an arts centre in Madrid by installing a flexible structure behind the concrete walls of an old industrial building (+ slideshow).

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

The renovated building functions as a research laboratory and exhibition space for Medialab-Prado, a city-funded organisation exploring the production and dissemination of art and digital culture.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis diaz diaz

La Serrería Belga, or The Belgian Sawmill, was built in the early twentieth century. For the renovation, architects María Langarita and Víctor Navarro decided to leave the facade of the old building intact and insert a more flexible structure inside, which they nicknamed La Cosa, or The Thing.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

“[It is] a light and articulated structure with a certain pre-technological air that, infiltrated in the building, enables a large potential for transformation,” they explain.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

The architects used lightweight and durable materials that can easily be taken apart and repurposed to facilitiate the changing needs of the organisation.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

“Any duplication or incorporation of elements or solutions that had already been contributed by the Serrería building was avoided,” they say.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

A three-storey volume was inserted into a void at the centre of the building and features translucent walls that can be illuminated with different neon colours.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

A series of wooden boxes provides an entrance and smaller rooms elsewhere in the building. There are also new staircases, wooden furniture and blinds that function as projection screens.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos worked on a similar project to construct a nomadic music academy in a Madrid warehouse. Other buildings by the studio include a road-side restaurant and event space and a house with an irregular geometric platform.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

See more architecture and interiors in Madrid, including a cinema in a former slaughterhouse.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

Here’s some more information from Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos:


Medialab-Prado
Madrid, Spain

Perhaps more than anything else, it is the very strangeness of the diverging intentions found in the La Serrería Belga adaptation project for the Medialab-Prado that makes it possible for them to coexist, though not without a certain measure of irony.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

The first of these caustic coexistences stems from a certain institutional schizophrenia. While the ‘Paseo del Arte’ was transformed into Madrid City Hall’s banner to attract international tourism, an architectural competition was simultaneously promoted in the same area, which would end up serving an institution that sponsored debates that were deeply critical of this model.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

Medialab defines itself as “a space for the production, research and dissemination of digital culture and the confluence between art, science, technology and society”, and, in contrast to the traditional exhibition model, it promotes production as a permeable process, supplanting the figure of the spectator with that of the actor, or the figure of the mediator as a facilitator of connections.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

La Serrería vs La Cosa is another pattern of coexistence that, like a conflicting dialect, facilitated the occupation of the intermediate space existing between both rivals, beyond the conventional concept of restoration.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

La Serrería Belga (The Belgian Sawmill) was built in various stages starting in the 1920’s by the architect Manuel Álvarez Naya and it was one of the first architectural achievements in Madrid to employ reinforced concrete. For its part, La Cosa (The Thing), is the name that we have used to refer to the group of mechanisms, installations and facilities that, when assembled, made it possible to bring the building up to date with current requirements.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

A light and articulated structure with a certain pre-technological air that, infiltrated in the building, enables a large potential for transformation. Ultimately, it is the coexistence of opposites that made it possible to think of the halfway point between these interlocutors not as a consummate product, but rather as an open, versatile process activated by its users.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

These forms of coexistence created the scope for some of the strategies used in this adaptation:

» The appropriation of the existing building, not only as a historic narration, but also as a container for latent energies that have joined the project as effective material. Any duplication or incorporation of elements or solutions that had already been contributed by the Serrería building was avoided.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Miguel de Guzmán

» The non-specific treatment of the spaces. This condition resulted in a homogenous approach to material solutions and the uniform distribution of installations.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

» Thinking about the action as a stratification with different levels of change over time. Lightweight construction systems that can be disassembled were chosen, as were materials whose durability and adaptability will not condition future transformations.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

» Looking at each new intervention as an opportunity to incorporate support systems for creative actions and research. This included solutions such as the use of double blinds as projection screens, taking advantage of voids in the existing structure to create a retro-projected floor, the use of the dividing wall as a digital facade and the design of La Cosa as a mechanism for digital experimentation.

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

Project: Adaptation of the Serrería Belga for the Centro Medialab-Prado location
Location: Madrid
Architects: María Langarita and Víctor Navarro
Collaborators: Elena Castillo, Marta Colón, Javier González Galán, Roberto González, Juan Palencia, Guillermo Trapiello, Gonzalo Gutiérrez, Paula García-Masedo

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Photograph by Luis Diaz Diaz

Surveyor: Santiago Hernán Martín
Structures: Mecanismo
Installations: Úrculo Ingenieros
Landscaping: Lorena García Rodríguez
Project date: January 2008
Client: Área de las Artes. Madrid City Hall
Budget: 1600 euros/m2

Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Concept diagram
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Exploded axonometric diagram
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Site diagram – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos_
Ground floor plan – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
First floor plan – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Second floor plan – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Basement plan – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Section one – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Section two – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Section three – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Section four – click for larger image
Medialab Prado by Langarita Navarro Arquitectos
Section five – click for larger image

The post Medialab-Prado by
Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos
appeared first on Dezeen.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Slideshow: Spanish studio Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos filled a Madrid warehouse with makeshift huts and a wilderness of plants to accommodate a nomadic music academy organised by drinks brand Red Bull.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

The temporary habitat was installed in the autumn to provide individual music studios for the use of 60 artists, as well as staff offices, a lounge and lecture hall and a recording studio.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Piled up sandbags created the soundproofed structure for the recording studio, while each music studio and office was housed inside a gabled wooden hut.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Sandbag walls also surrounded the bulbous lounge and lecture hall, while faceted ceilings overhead displayed stripy monochrome patterns.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

Once the festival was over the structures were dismantled without a trace and the shrubbery was replanted around the city, leaving the warehouse intact.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

It wasn’t long ago we revealed images of Red Bull’s new Amsterdam headquarters – see them here.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

Photography is by Luis Diaz Diaz, apart from where otherwise stated.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

Here’s some more information from Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos:


Red Bull Music Academy
Nave de la Música en Matadero Madrid

In many ways this project shares the logic of a Russian matryoshka doll. Not only in the most literal, physical sense, in which one thing is directly incorporated into another, but also in a temporal sense, in which one actually originates within the other. The initial circumstances of this project established a favorable backdrop for this condition:

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

An emergency project. The Red Bull Music Academy Madrid 2011:

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

The Red Bull Music Academy (RBMA) is a nomadic annual music festival. For the last 14 years, this event has been held in a different world city, welcoming the sixty pre-selected international participants and surrounding them with musicians, producers, and DJs, thereby giving them the opportunity to experiment with and exchange knowledge and ideas about the world of music.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

The 2011 edition of RBMA was going to be held in Tokyo, but given the devastating effects of the earthquake, the location had to be changed. With only five months to plan, the city of Madrid took over. The creative space known as Matadero Madrid, which is located in an early 20th century industrial warehouse complex, was designated as the event’s new location.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

A medium-term project, The Nave de Música in Matadero Madrid

The RBMA launched the programming for the new Nave de Música (music warehouse), a space specifically dedicated to audio creation and research. Using the existing installation as a starting point and given its experimental character, the construction project was approached as a temporary structure based on the criteria of adaptability and reversibility that would make it easy to completely or partially reconfigure over time.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by LNA

Under these circumstances and in an emergency situation, the work began on an infrastructure capable of meeting the precise technical and acoustic needs of the event, in addition to accelerating, promoting and enriching a series of extremely intense artistic encounters that would take place between the participating musicians, while at the same time adding an environment that would record and archive everything taking place.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Above: photograph is by Miguel de Guzman

The proposal was developed based on five guidelines:

1. Deadlines and budget. The design had to specifically comply with some very tight deadlines and budgetary concerns. The construction had to be completed in less than two months, implementing solutions that would require only light construction and seeking a balance between standardization and adaptability.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

2. Regarding the warehouse. Warehouse 15 of the Matadero is an open space comprised of a metallic structure with a brick facade. This structure, which measures about 4,700 m2, opens directly to the outside. One of the criteria taken into account for this project was that of not modifying the warehouse itself, but rather leaving it exactly as it was before the intervention.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

3. Program requirements. The program’s organization clearly establishes a specific configuration that is grouped into four areas: offices, studios for musicians, recording studios and an area used for conferences, radio and as a lounge. The chosen spatial and constructive systems would allow for the reconfiguration of these spaces for future events.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

4. Acoustics. The event’s acoustic requirements determined its geometry, as well as the choice of materials and constructive solutions. Each of the areas acquired a specific logic that corresponded with its usage, thereby making it possible to uniquely resolve its acoustic needs. Some heterogeneous solutions included the massive walls in the recording studios, the absorbent surfaces of the cloth domes in the conference room and the structural and geometric independence of the nonparallel pavilions.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

5. Temporariness. Given the temporary nature of this project and in order to avoid influencing future interventions in the warehouse, it was designed to be dismantled in such a way so as to not leave a trace. Even the “heaviest” actions were designed to be reversible and to allow for their easy recycling for future events. Examples of this included the use of sandbags to make up the walls of the recording studios and potted plants that could later be transplanted in other areas of the Matadero or the city.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

As a result, the project unfolded in the warehouse’s interior in the form of a fragmented urban structure in which the variable relationship between proximity and independence, and preexistence and performance could offer unexpected stages to its community of inhabitants.

Red Bull Music Academy by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Architects: Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos, María Langarita y Víctor Navarro
Collaborators: Juan Palencia, Gonzalo Gutierrez, Tonia Papanikolau, Paula García-Masedo
Surveyor: Javier Reñones
Landscape: Jerónimo Hagerman
Mechanicals: Úrculo ingenieros
Acoustics: Imar Sanmartí Acousthink S.L.
Structures: Mecanismo S.L.
Light structures: Arquiges y Cuatro50
Ending date: 2011

Lolita by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Spanish studio Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos have completed a road-side restaurant and event space on a motorway junction near Zaragoza, Spain.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Called Lolita, it aims to rethink the typical pit-stop restaurant and provide flexible facilities for everyone from long-distance truck drivers to local students.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The building features a cluster of white-rendered and timber-clad forms that take their cue from nearby industrial buildings.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Lolita presents a blank facade to the approach road and car park while the dining areas are arranged to provide views onto a landscape of gravel and trees.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Photographs are by Miguel de Guzman.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Lolita, infrastructure for events and meals
Km 45 A-122, La Almunia de Doña Godina, Zaragoza

Roadside restaurants are a rare species within the increasingly prestigious restaurant world. Such places superpose their condition as an infrastructure adapted to the commercial, informational and social flow of the road network on mythical scenarios taken from road movies and literature.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

In recent years, their structures have evolved in order to offer services for large-format events without this having involved anything more than a change in scale.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The project rose to the challenge of changing this trend by building a structure capable of managing a programme subject to constant reorganisation, with the presence of a heterogeneous public and the expectation of diverse uses, a flexible space capable of setting itself up as a scenario for almost any type of activity. The aim was to transform a roadside restaurant into a versatile infrastructure for events and meals.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Lolita is located in La Almunia de Doña Godina, junction 270 of Autovía A-2, in a strategic position from a logistical point of view between the commercial routes of Madrid-Barcelona and Valencia-Bilbao, just a few kilometres from several towns and in the vicinity of the university campus of the EUPLA.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The building seeks to exploit a variety and mixture of activities, on one hand attending to the different groups of users and on the other to the diversity of lengths of stays, that can go from the 10 minutes spent by the occasional visitor on a coffee break to the lunch taken by the regular patrons that follow the commercial routes, the compulsory rest times of the haulage drivers, the afternoons of the students who take advantage of the Wi-Fi networks or the full day spent by guests at a celebration.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The project is configured as a cumulative space of experiences that, by linking two autonomous and differentiated systems, explores the compatibility of the open-plan model with one of specific and designated spaces.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The soft system configures a continuous space of irregular geometry perforated by patios where the camp-style grouping of furniture and the flexible lighting enable different ways of organising the space.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The interior is characterised by a patterned/semi-perforated concrete slab and by the wood, glass and polycarbonate of the walls. The façade is a variable-section double strip that establishes a dynamic and variable relationship with the exterior space, facilitating the full view of the surrounding landscape while in the interior creating a complex play of reflections and transparencies.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The rigid system is a build-up of specialised boxes made from 8-metre-long alveolar panels and brick walls that house specific and to some extent ritualised programmes.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

In the interior the spaces are customised by combining the criteria of the programme with elements taken from popular culture.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

The system is connected with the surroundings through well-chosen and fragmented vistas, generating a hermetic image that allows the large blind surfaces to be used as a support for road signage.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Click for larger image

In the project, the grouping of systems builds a new installation in the landscape that accrues images from nearby reference points (industrial premises, greenhouses, sheds, improvised lorry parks, road signs) to expand the concept of a road facility and thus situate it closer to that of a public infrastructure.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Click for larger image

Architects: María Langarita and Víctor Navarro
Collaborators: Marta Colón, Cristina Garzón

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Click for larger image

Roberto González, Juan Palencia, Julia Urcoli
Structures: Mecanismo S.L.

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Click for larger image

Mechanical: Inés Plaza
Surveyor: Fernando Cornago
Completion date: 2010

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Little Chef by
Ab Rogers Design
Studio East Dining by
Carmody Groarke
Nomiya temporary restaurant by Pascal Grasso