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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.

Music Park in Sevilla, Spain by Costa Fierros Arquitectos

 
May 17th, 2012 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Costa Fierros Arquitectos

The Park is located in an existing degraded area, lacking of facilities, and known historically as a land dividing the nearby quarters (Águilas and Los Prunos neighbourhoods) and isolating their inhabitants.

Before the construction of Underground Line 1 was undertaken, this area was used as the official premises for Seville’s (tour) horse carriage owners as well as later housing the constructions for the initial attempt to build the city’s underground in the 70’s. As the Line 1 was to pass through these neighbourhoods, the opportunity to revaluate the land surrounding the underground station there arouse, and the Underground project was the starting point for considering the area renovation and providing the station with a quality landscape.

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

  • Architects: Costa Fierros Arquitectos
  • Project: Music Park in Sevilla
  • Location: Sevilla, Spain
  • Preliminary Design: August 2007
  • Base Design: October 2007
  • Working Project: February 2008
  • Construction Dates: November 2008 – November 2011
  • Project Architects: Sara Tavares Costa And Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros
  • Collaborators: David Breva, Paula Ferreira, Pedro Rito Nobre, David Ampe, Elena González, Rosario Alcantarilla, Sergio González, Cristina Rubiño, Alejandro Rodríguez
  • Software used: AutoCad, Photoshop and Microsoft Office

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

  • Quantity Surveyor: Antonio Carrascal Cruzado
  • Structure: Catsoli S.L.
  • Installations: Etinsa
  • Botanists: Ernesto Fernández Sanmartín, Sara Tavares Costa
  • Rendering: Marcin Sapeta, Alfonso Fiz
  • Photographer: Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros
  • Developer: Agencia De Obra Pública De La Junta De Andalucía
  • Building Contractor: Rafael Morales S.A., Heliopol, S.A.U.
  • Build Surface Area: 32.487 M2
  • Budget: 4.544.894,06 €
  • Cost/m2 : 1.400 €

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

Cocheras Station was open in 2009. It is slightly below ground level and partly buried, and the underground trains that come from the subterranean part need a steep slope to reach the station level and get to the SE-30 highway bridge level later, meaning that the concrete underground tunnel through which the tracks pass rises up to a maximum height of 7m, acting as a solid physical barrier between the two neighbourhoods.

PROJECT GOALS – DESIGN INTENTIONS

Parque de la Música is a unique masterplan in terms of urban renovation and integration linked to Sevilla Underground infraestructure works, initiated in January 2009. During the design phases (2006-2008) the project was developed in an active collaboration with the local neighboors asociations from the nearby quarters (Águilas, los Prunos). The most significant contributions accepted by the public developer Junta de Andalucía was to improve accessibility to the station and through the park with lifts and escalator.

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

The Park area is 32.487 m2 and ensures accessibility to Cocheras Station, located at the centre of the Park, and the connectivity between the houses located at both sides of the station. The new landscape created helps to enjoy a walk around it or having a rest in the designated areas of the park, and the continuity of the different urban itineraries, making them more convenient and accessible for everybody. There is a dual purpose: a more cohesive city, regenerated and with better internal connections, and providing a more human and better quality outdoor space and therefore better quality of life for their inhabitants.

The park is organized along a North-South promenade that reaches the station level with a gentle slope. Other transversal circulations connect the main promenade with the surrounding streets and plazas.

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

In the East side, the level difference is solved with retaining walls embracing and protecting the plazas at the surrounding neighbourhoods levels. There is a lift and an escalator next to the station entrance for accessibility.

In the West side, the level difference is resolved with a retaining wall that goes parallel to the underground tunnel and curves itself creating the ramp directing to the main West entrance. There is another lift for access at the corner between the pedestrian street Águila Marina and Águila de Oro street.

First quality pavement materials have been used: ceramic tiles, lime and granite stones. The patterns are repeated creating a geometry that connects all the different areas in the park. This pattern is inspired in an existing ceramic pattern in the Patio de Muñecas from the Reales Alcazares in Seville.

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

One of the geometry pattern is a combination of 6x2m rectangles stones and groundcover, forming a obstacles free carpet that allows always complete visibility of the surroundings providing comfort and a feeling of safety from all locations. The groundcovers also fill the retaining walls to the plazas that are rotated East, providing colour and textures to them.

The curved wall, 274m long and with a maximum height of 7m, transforms itself into a vegetable painting as it contains 24 different varieties from 18 grass species, all of them carefully selected depending on their location, orientation, compatibility, colour and scent.

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

There are also two hundred of trees from 23 different species, selected due to their size, foliage, flowers, shadow qualities, fruits and symbolism. There are perennial trees, providing green all year long, deciduous trees, that will announce the springs and the autumns, and semi-perennial leaf trees, blossing at different times of the year, providing together with the flower blossom a true plant calendar.

It has been also always considered the use of local and low maintenance plants and trees.

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

Image Courtesy Pablo F. Díaz-Fierros

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Categories: Autocad, Music Centre, Park, Photoshop




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