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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.

CITY CULTURAL CENTER in Taichung, Taiwan by BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

 
October 3rd, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM 

Taiwan, land of sea, land of mountains, where amazing forms and landscape have been formed by the action of natural forces. Waves, tides, coast, prairies, mountains, mountain ridges.Sea people, land people, strong, tenacious, tireless. People of Taiwan.

The new “City Cultural Center” grows from the earth, with the strength of the sea and mountains, to show to the world how Taiwan is, how Taichung is. And it uses this strength to configure an astonishing landscape architecture able to project internationally the new cultural center.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

  • Architects: BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM
  • Project: CITY CULTURAL CENTER
  • Location: Taichung, Taiwan
  • Collaborators: Borja García, Igor Gonzalez, Rodrigo Cearra, Joseba Salbide, Ander Barandiaran, Imanol Goenaga.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

The view from “Taichung Gateway Park” shows how land raises, configuring wavy shapes, showing the folds of the tectonic plates that shaped the island of Taiwan. It brings to our memory the wonderful mountain landscapes in Taiwan, including their famous tea fields. “Taichung Gateway Park” and the new “City Cultural Center” put together into a unique landscape, giving a united answer to the project site. The paths that define the design of “Taichung Gateway Park” show us, in almost a natural way, the access to the new “City Cultural Center”. A direct and clear relationship between the park and the competition purpose is managedby the use of open and clear flows.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

The view from Park Avenue 2 is completely different. The winding bodies that grow from the park start to open, and finish drawing us shapes that remind us of the sea. Images of the waves breaking into the shore, and sea breeze stroking our faces. The building shows itself this way, facing the city in an open and permeable way, looking for an intense relationship with it.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

The formalization of the building is managed by the concatenation of a structure of great depth laminated wood beams. They are disposed each one meter and joined with lateral connectors. Apart from the structural duty, these connectors are used to carry some of the building systems.  Different roof coverings are disposed depending on the interior requirements. Most of the roof surface is covered by a green carpet, but we also find glass surfaces for providing light to the interior spaces, solar panels or wooden paved areas.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Most of the energetic and sustainability requirements are managed in the depth of the ribs, thanks to their studied shape and section. The different air chambers, doors and discharge systems provided, in addition to a computerized management will allow the thermal, lighting and acoustic control, becoming the building a worldwide green building reference.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

A big meeting space or plaza has been proposed to connect Taichung Gateway Park and Park Avenue 2. It’s configured as the union of two great halls, one from the park and the other one from the avenue. The green path coming from the park is introduced into this space, and it shades as it reaches the avenue, where it earns a more urban aspect. It is here where the entries of the two buildings are placed.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

THE MUSEUM

From this plaza, it is possible to contemplate the great glass façade behind which the museum is placed. This glass façade, built using the latest technologies in curtain walls, has different clarity and U.V. protection levels. By using internal projectors, games with clarity, light and shadow try to provide effects we could find in Chinese shadows. At night, the façade could offer us different images that could advertise the events inside.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

The building aims to show itself as a Culture Temple, and internal spaces have been carefully designed in order to get to it. The museum hall, great triple-height hall, welcomes the visitor with a great shocking vision. The visitor will find here the museum shop, the museum reception and the stairs that go up to the Education and Research spaces.

The different floors of the museum are organized into horizontal soft-shaped slabs. Their limits don`t touch neither the façade nor the rib-structure, leaving between them empty spaces that give the building the spatial richness befitting a museum.

THE LIBRARY

The future library, destined to become one of the most important in Taiwan, is organized around the great hall. This hall is to provide the visitor the role of literacy for humanity. Thus there has been conceived a vacuum that connects all floors.

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

Image Courtesy © BILBAO ARCHITECTURE TEAM

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Category: Cultural Center




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