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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Species Deposit in Legazpi, Madrid by Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos (designed using AutoCAD, Rhino, and Grasshopper)

 
November 3rd, 2011 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: María Langarita and Víctor Navarro

Matadero Madrid’s elevated water tower  is a singular work: a concrete structure standing 25 meters high and 14 in diameter, located on the southern edge of the new contemporary creation space. The tower, which originally was surrounded by small garden pavilions for workers at the complex, now rests on a lot that has functioned in recent years as a makeshift parking zone and a space for stock and support of artistic activities.  This earth-covered area, in which some of the plant species that inhabited the gardens still survive, will, in the near future, cover an underground transport hub and be transformed into a paved plaza providing access to the cultural facility.

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

  • Architects: Langarita-Navarro Arquitectos
  • Project: Species Deposit
  • Location: Legazpi, Madrid
  • Architect Design: María Langarita and Víctor Navarro
  • Collaborators: Gonzalo Gutiérrez, Juan Palencia, Ana Rosales;
  • Landscaping: Jerónimo Hagerman;
  • Client: Matadero Madrid
  • Completion date: 2011
  • Software used: Autocad 2011, Rhino 4, Grasshopper

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

The need to refurbish the structure, badly damaged by years of neglect, prompted a decision by the Arts Department of the City of Madrid to study the tower’s strategic position, at the core of future access to the site from the Legazpi Plaza, and to carry out the construction work in such a way that the structure functions as a space communicating with the Matadero.

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

Analysis of the site and perceiving the deposit as a place rather than an object gave rise to the idea  of using the ta’s  base in an active way.  Visitors, who enter via the wooden walkway that connects Legazpi Plaza to Matadero St., find themselves inside the structure, with an inherited garden.  This space harbours a series of plant species that were dispersed across the area, and were poised to disappear as a result of the construction of the future hub.  The garden features climbing plants, shrubs and trees: Prunus pisardi, Ficus carica, Rhus typhina, Parthenocissus tricuspidata, Lonicera caprifolium, Aloysia triphylla, Pergonium crispum, Cinerária, Cornus sanguínea, Garrya elliptica, Fragaria and Vitis vinífera. These plants and trees were either growing naturally or were planted by workers, and will now be recovered to provide an intimate meeting place.

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

The project represents a call for reflection on the concepts of restoration and preservation, converting the water tower into the memory and record of a place and a moment, the Noah’s Ark rescuing the flora found in the Matadero surroundings.

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

Image Courtesy Miguel de Guzmán

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Categories: Autocad, Grasshopper, Rhino, Water tank




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