Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

Photographer Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre has sent us these photographs of a curved concrete library in San Sebastian with a narrow courtyard driven through its centre.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

Completed in 2008 by Ander Marquet Ryan of Spanish architects JAMM, the Carlos Santamaría Centre is located on the campus of the University of the Basque Country.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

Timber-panelled walls surround the secluded courtyard, which separates the two-storey building into two asymmetrical halves.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

The library’s book collection is housed on two storeys of the larger half, while the smaller part contains separate study rooms and a lecture theatre.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

The round concrete exterior walls converge into a point at the front entrance to give the building a teardrop-shaped plan. Students walk through this pointed entrance into a double-height colonnade, where L-shaped timber columns surround a glass wall and roof.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

Photographer Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre previously photographed the helter-skelter-like Centro Niemeyer by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, which you can see here.

Here’s some information from the architect:


The Carlos Santamaría Centre, located in San Sebastian is an advanced data centre and library, linked to the Ibaeta University Campus and the result of a competition developed by the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU).

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

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The building is conceived as a huge container, shaped from a spontaneous outline following the natural curve of the lot. The line is the wall containing the two blocks arranged in a north-south direction, and its vertex is at the place we consider the most important: the building’s main access, which opens up like a large mouth, pointing the vertex towards the sky.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

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The division of the construction into two blocks also makes the creation of a private, inner garden possible, like an extension of the spaces that overlook it. It is a quiet, green area, accessible for strolling, reading and group meetings, always lighted from the south and north, an outdoor counterpoint to urban noise, inside the building.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

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With regard to its construction, the principal façade of the building is a curved wall of 25cm made out of white self-compacting concrete. On the other hand, in the garden which divides the building the solution of the facades consists of IPE wood planks.

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

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Architect: Ander Marquet Ryan, JAAM sociedad de arquitectura s.l.p.
Quantity surveyor: Juncal Aldamizechevarría

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

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Collaborators: June Gómez Alonso, Emmanuele Pibiri, Naia Landa Méndez, Mario Domínguez Maestre
Structure: Minteguia y Bilbao

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

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Instalaciones: PGI (project), JG ingenieros (construction).
Developer: Universidad del País Vasco (UPV-EHU)

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

Construction company: Construcciones Moyua
Date of project: January 2008

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM

End of construction: September 2008
Area: 24.000m²

Carlos Santamaría Centre by JAAM


See also:

.

Médiathèque
by Tétrarc
Multimedia Centre
by Béal & Blanckaert
La Médiateque de Proville by TANK Architectes

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Photographer Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre has sent us his photos of the Centro Niemeyer by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer, which opens tomorrow in Avilés, Spain.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

An auditorium for 1000 spectators spills onto a public plaza, which also contains a viewing tower and three-storey dome-shaped museum.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

A spiral staircase inside the museum leads to a mezzanine where light and sound installations will be on show for the inaugural exhibition, featuring work by film director Carlo Saura.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

A separate building houses a cinema, rehearsal rooms, meeting areas and conference halls.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Photographs are by Iñigo Bujedo Aguirre/View.

The information below is from the Centro Cultural Internacional:


In 1989, the now one hundred year old Brazilian architect, Oscar Niemeyer, was awarded the Prince of Asturias of the Arts Award. On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Awards in 2006, the Prince of Asturias Foundation (FPA) invited all the award winners to participate in the celebrations.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

“I am an architect and, as such, what I do is design buildings and that is just what I am going to do; design a building.” And so, on a blank piece of paper, Oscar Niemeyer began sketching curves, a skill in which he excels. With this, Niemeyer offered one of the best possible gifts ever.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Those first sketches, drawn with a thick black marker, formed the foundations of an ambitious cultural project which will be housed in what Niemeyer himself has called his most important project in Europe and his only project in Spain.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Programme

The Niemeyer Center is an open door to culture in all its shapes, forms, traditions and styles. Music, theatre, cinema, expositions, conferences and outdoor and educational news will be the main focus of a multidisciplinary cultural programme of which the only common denominator is excellence.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

The Niemeyer Center was created to attract talent, knowledge and creativity. From this point of view, not only will it be a gateway to the best of the world’s culture, but also a producer of contents. Since the celebration of the First World Forum of Cultural Centres in Avilés the Niemeyer Center has worked in connection with some of the most prestigious cultural centres throughout the world, such as the Carnegie Hall, the Old Vic Theatre and Cannes Film Festival, among others.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Facilities and Spaces The Niemeyer Center is the only piece of work created by Oscar Niemeyer to be built in Spain and, in his own words, it will be the most important of all his European designs.

Centro Niemeyer by Oscar Niemeyer

Driven by the same healthy ambition, the Niemeyer Center aims to become an international reference point in the production of cultural content; a space associated with excellence dedicated to education and culture. In order to accomplish this, the cultural complex will consist of five areas which are both separate yet complementary to each other:

  • An auditorium with capacity for 1,000 spectators.
  • An almost 4,000 square meter open-plan exhibition site.
  • Viewing point over the estuary and the city.
  • Multi-use building that will house a cinema, rehearsal areas and meeting and conference halls.
  • An open square, where entertainment and cultural activities will be programmed on a continuous basis, which will form a point of union between the Center and the city.

See also:

.

International Fair of Tripoli
by Oscar Niemeyer
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