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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.

Cinema Cente in Matadero de Legazpi, Madrid by CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos

 
December 22nd, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos

Memory, memories, even bad memory always twist and fly when we work on architectural past, … yes, make a story, choose the tone, cadence, rhythm, accents, a story that naturally coexist with collective memory of the old slaughterhouse of Madrid, with another early report of new application dedicated to the movies while curled up with the forgetfulness of their own recurrent obsessions…

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

  • Architects: CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos
  • Project: Cinema Cente
  • Location: Matadero de Legazpi, Madrid
  • Photography: Fernando Guerra
  • Program: Refurbishment and conversion of an old slaughterhouse into a public cinema center housing a film archive, film and television studio, two cinemas, offices, canteen, and summer film patio
  •  Area: Built-up Area:2.688 m2
  • Year: Design: 2009 • Completion: 2011
  •  More details: Cost: 4.104.843 €
  •  Client: Madrid City Council
Team:

  • Principal Designer: Josemaria de Churtichaga
  • Project Design Team: Mauro Doncel Marchán, Natanael López Pérez
  • Building Design Team: Leticia López de Santiago

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The magical backlight and contrast of the films, and the childhood fascination of basketry and technical human infinite geometries are the sensory triangle… the rest is to surround in spiral this atmosphere, this feeling, and define it constructively.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The tectonic history of brickland, the powerful rhetoric of the old slaughterhouse is the background, and also figure at the scenes of the story, a story in which a continuous low background, a wooden monomaterial painted in dark gray defines the new program deployed on walls, floors and ceilings, allowing a clear separation between story and History. Against this dark carpet background, my own memory outputs a floating figures, some huge vibrant baskets that define the main spaces.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The Film Archive Area is covered by a permeable basket, huge, walkable, that filters light and works as a lamp, a huge figure of a modest orange hose knitted infinitely. The Baskets that define Film rooms are shades of black. In the main room the orange background illuminated make the basket float until the movie begins, the background disappears and only a vibrant black surface stays. In the small projection room, a basket-banked trough very black on black space fleet almost black wood, only when you open a window dazzles the eye.

Because the eye and limits of perception are ultimately the real protagonists of this history of cinema.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Silent Structure:

There is a constructive and structural battle, a battle to defend silent and hidden history. And to defend it is to disobey the pathology reports that distrust of the History of the factory building, do not understand that the factories of brick and masonry love to be charged… are happier and more cohesive… and that its logic is always a problem of stability and strength.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Relying on these unrepeatable walls of solid brick and lime mortar, the intervention has solved the great spam required by the program. The horizontal structure has been solved with reinforced concrete slabs, whose two-way working with the existing brick walls make a complete set of vertical load-bearing walls, distributing efforts through the generous cloth walls. The foundations of these walls was reinforced overloading batteries slightly inclined of micropiles penetrating under the vertical projection of stepped masonry foundations.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Background and Baskets:

Upon resolution of the structure, a continuous carpet of grey painted pine flooring covers walls, floors and ceilings defining the new architecture of space. Against this dark wood background, the monomaterial woven baskets, frames made of bent steel tubing as the guarantors of geometry, and woven with conventional industrial irrigation hoses.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Facilities:

The spaces defined by the tectonics of the preexisting, the dark background of wood and the protagonists of the baskets figures required a deliberate silence on the introduction of the facilities. The enormous demand of fresh air that require the Plato and the Cinemas need a huge conducts that gets buried under ground most of these easements. The areas without such large ventilation requirements, such as lobbies, offices and circulation areas are solved with underfloor heating / cooling systems.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The lighting is deliberately disordered avoiding the perverse and sad homogeneity to which we are pushed by our regulations. Clusters of bulbs view dances in the walls… stripes of woven LEDs lighten the baskets and the space underneath.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos

Image Courtesy © CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos

Image Courtesy © CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos

Image Courtesy © CHURTICHAGA + QUADRA-SALCEDO arquitectos

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Category: Cinema




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