

If sustainable buildings
can be understood as the resourceful result from the use of local materials,
local workforce, economical restrictions, climatic particularities and a
projected low maintenance, the Public Library for the tropical city of Villanueva
in Colombia can be understood as such.
Before the project had to face with such realities, we began intuitively
with a strong urban spatial proposal, dressed in a minimal handcrafted technical
solution. Also, and because it was the result of a national public contest
won against all odds by four young architects, the ingenuity of the project's
radical proposals met with the crude reality (and lots of engineers, experts,
etc), resulting in the end in a built fresh statement
Program
It's a building consisting of two different compact volumes, one houses the public library in the second floor and the complementary program in the first floor (theatre, kids library, administration offices, work spaces, bathrooms), and the other volume shelters a public corridor-plaza. .
Materials
Each of these volumes is built in separate techniques and materials, one in stone gabions (taken under permission from a nearby river) and the other one in pine wood (taken from an ecologically controlled planted forest). In the middle, five metallic white lattice boxes group the program, allowing the air to run though and also creating an open atmosphere where you can see both the wood and the stone. The final outside image renders a monumental project given its scale in the context, but a the same time a down-to-earth sort-of craftsmanship result, an homage to local made-by-hand objects for the daily life, in short, a minimal tropicallized modern building built for/out of the site.
Even though it's too early to say anything, the experiment is showing that
listening to the context and mostly, reinventing it wisely without show-off
architectural forms, the project do becomes a social catalyst, and as such
is being recognized mostly by its inhabitants: as an authentic cultural
project, more than a library, or may be, a true library.
There's no resentment when we speak of show-off forms, because the Library
is very visual and was conceived like that, but as an opposite to the form
we offer an spatial approach: all of the elements of the project work in
that direction: the plaza shelters people from the rain and the sun but
the light comes through so they can extend the inner use and propose other
cultural activities parallel to the library, the gabion walls are not glued
together so the air runs though (without any signs of air conditioning).
Conflict
In a country like Colombia where the overstretched-in-time armed conflict affects everybody in one way or another, a cultural project like VPL can’t escape this fact, even less if you understand that Villanueva was a hotspot in the middle of a local war between armed groups where the civilians suffered the consequences; the building’s technique can be seen as a mediator in the post-conflict process, indirectly becoming a project for renewal, for healing.
The building process attracted attention and many former outlaw militants
joined the workforce as "reinserted" civilians. This meant, from
the heart of the project that we had to ease the techniques, to be even
more inclusive, to reinvent what social means not only in the result but
also in the process: workshops had to be improvised within the construction
site, where new people kept coming in to offer their hands: quilt strategy.
More than housing
books, the function offered by the library opens up spaces to rewrite the
local history.
.
Alejandro
Piñol
Bogotà
COLOMBIA
LINKS:
PROJECT
DATA
PROJECT : Biblioteca Pubblica di Villanueva
LOCATION: Villanueva (Colombia)
ARCHITECTS: Alejandro Piñol, Germán Ramírez, Miguel Torres, Carlos Meza.
AREA: 1551 sq. m
COST: 1,140.000 USD.
PROGRAM: public library, kids library, 100-seat auditorium, working spaces, cafeteria and a public plaza.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Nicolas Cabrera
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Channelbeta Information Channel on Contemporary Architecture |

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[2008-12-06] |
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photo by Nicolas Cabrera
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