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

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

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

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

Lolita by Langararita-Navarro Arquitectos

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See also:

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Canyon Ranch Living, Hotel and Spa Miami Beach

Canyon Ranch Miami

Known the world over for its weather, beaches, increasingly important art, design and cultural scenes and of course its celebrated night life, Miami Beach is perhaps not the first destination you think of when you’re planning a spa getaway. But it’s for all these reasons that I like Canyon Ranch Living, Hotel and Spa Miami Beach so much. You’re in the middle of everything, but it’s extremely easy to turn it all off and spend the day hiking on the beach or taking in the fitness and wellness programs, and enjoying Canyon Ranch’s renowned health-conscious cuisine.

Having had the opportunity to experience Canyon Ranch’s larger and more immersive resort in Lenox, MA on several occasions, I happily accepted the invitation to have a more in-depth experience during the South Beach Wine and Food Festival. Conveniently located on Collins Avenue and 68th Street, it is only a few minutes to both Surfside and Bal Harbour to the North, South Beach to the South, Wynwood and the Design District to the West, and the MoCA and cluster of mid-century modern shops Northwest. The resort has 750 feet of prime beach, on a stretch with a wide and well maintained board walk.

Bernardo Fort-Brescia, co-founder of Miami’s most famous architectural firm Arquitectonica, took us on a tour of the resort they designed. The first thing you notice from the porte-cochère as you drive up is the wide open view to the beach through a palm grove. Connecting to the Miami of the past, the hotel is housed in the completely renovated, historic Carillon hotel; it proudly features its original, restored neon sign and recalls its reign as one of the most celebrated hotels of the 1950s. Today the Carillon tower houses the 150 spacious one- and two-bedroom hotel suites, as well as 80 condos, and a dining and retail area.

Bernardo pointed out several of the original design elements, and explained the complexity of the building’s renovation. A testament to good design, it captures the original building’s personality while bringing the space to a more current (and up to code) presence. One of the bigger challenges facing the design team was the building’s numerous columns, which are now completely invisible as you walk through the suites. Other benefits of the restoration include the addition of floor-to-ceiling glass to better enjoy the views and interiors by David Rockwell and his team at Rockwell Group.

canyon-ranch-miami-10.jpg

The core of the resort is the 70,000-square-foot Wellness Spa—it’s as big as it sounds. Here, you get all of the Canyon Ranch love that made them famous. The Spa includes the Wellness Center, where you can consult with physicians about injuries, ailments, weight loss, prevention and healthy living. The fitness center offers nearly every type of cardio and workout equipment (including a climbing wall and Pilates machines), and dozens of exercise, movement and fitness classes. You can of course chill at one of the pools, sit on the beach, take a class at the outdoor fitness studio, or enjoy one of the 54 treatment rooms, which house some of the best spa treatments you’ll find anywhere in just about every flavor. My favorites are Ashiatsu and Reflexology, the latter done on a Neuroacoustic Sound Table, which uses sound technology to help relax minds and bodied. The Spa also includes his and hers Aquavana thermal suites—a collection of hydrospas, saunas, steam rooms, laconiums (dry saunas) and showers.

The Hotel and Spa are flanked by two newly constructed condo towers, where one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments (from 720 to more than 3,500 square-feet) feature amazing city, bay and ocean views, Rockwell-designed interiors, and of course use of the Wellness Spa and restaurants. Residents also can relax at their own pools if they don’t feel like mingling with the hotel guests. You can learn all about The Residences online.

Well-known for its approach to healthy eating, the Canyon Ranch Grill delivers on that promise with low calorie, tasty and fulfilling meals that feature local and organic food whenever possible. The South Beach Wine and Food Festival brought Executive Chef Scott Uehlein out from the Tucson resort, and he treated us to the most memorable five-course meal with fewer than 800 calories that I’ve ever eaten. Unlike the other Canyon Ranch resorts, the Miami property doesn’t ignore the city’s other temptations, and offers a really great selection of organic and biodynamic beer, wine and spirits. You can also eat the Carillon Café or poolside at The Cabana.

While the wholly engaging nature of the Tucson and Lenox resorts create a more complete experience, the Miami Beach Hotel and Spa offers a uniquely refreshing way to experience Miami.

More photos by Nikolas Koenig in the gallery.


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