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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.

Edificio Jacinto Chiclana in Buenos Aires, Argentina by Ça Arquitectura

 
September 9th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Ça Arquitectura

The building Jacinto Chiclana offers collective housing on a northwest corner property in Moreno, suburb of Buenos Aires. The building’s namesake, a character from the BorgesPiazzola tango, and the tango itself are lionized throughout the building and reflected in its design and construction.

The L shape of the building creates a central patio, with expansive, semienclosed central patio. The building is enveloped by a second concrete skin that is both structural and definitive of the buildings loggia. This creates intermediate spaces around the lateral facades and this fifth facade that incorporate the exterior in the interior space and the interior in the exterior. From an environmental perspective, this intermediate space serves as an initial barrier that reduces heat loss during the winter and heat gain during the summer.

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

  • Architects: Ça Arquitectura
  • Project: Edificio Jacinto Chiclana
  • Location: Rivadavia 576, Moreno, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  • Photography: Federico Kulekdjian
  • Team of Collaborators / Associates: Arq. Alejandro Micieli, Arq. Natalia Arroyo, Arq. Antoine Segurel.
  • Construction: Constructora ÇaMet, Patro S.A.
  • Client: Manuel Micieli.
  • Surface: 4.100 m2
  • Years:

    • Project: 2012
    • Construction: 2015

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

JCH consists in 38 small housing units, each with optimized sunlight conditions and cross ventilation. The ample common spaces seek to complete the reduced personal space; providing a large kitchen and dining area on the terrace and a brick grill, fire pit and pool off the central patio, both accompanied by public bathrooms. The common spaces are easily accessible from every unit, connected by elevator from basement to terrace, promoting the appropriation of these spaces by the residents. JCH consists in 38 small housing units, each with optimized sunlight conditions and cross ventilation. The ample common spaces seek to complete the reduced personal space; providing a large kitchen and dining area on the terrace and a brick grill, fire pit and pool off the central patio, both accompanied by public bathrooms. The common spaces are easily accessible from every unit, connected by elevator from basement to terrace, promoting the appropriation of these spaces by the residents. The areas of transit were reinterpreted in the interest of quality, creating open spaces, with sunlight and a view that facilitate life and encounters between neighbors, rather than optimizing circulation.

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

The structure of the building is made of reinforced concrete and the internal walls with traditional masonry. The concrete slabs were constructed using the prenova system, which reduced concrete requirements by 30 %. Because this concrete is not the primary interior material, it can be left unpolished without compromising thermal conditions Both laminate and wood shutters were used in the concrete formwork. The eastern facade was etched by a local artist in commemoration of the works of Borges, matching the seemingly handwritten text of the iron gate and fence.

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

In the interior, the concrete is graffitied with a series of portraits that allude to the Borges’ mythological city outskirts in a contemporary language. Behind the glass posterior wall of the elevator, the permanent artistic installation by Pedro Menard, a local artist, can be viewed in its entirety by traveling from the basement to the terrace. The ceilings of the ground floor are overlaid with wood panels carved by a CNC router. Guardrails on the balconies and terraces are made of safety glass with stainless steel handrails. Concrete and water meet in the heated pool, which crosses internal and external space at a variety of depths and offers spaces appropriate for swimming, wading, and using the jacuzzi. JCH is a work that integrates into its surroundings, into the green of the neighborhood and the community of buildings that are beginning to arise.

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Federico Kulekdjian

Image Courtesy © Ça Arquitectura

Image Courtesy © Ça Arquitectura

Image Courtesy © Ça Arquitectura

Image Courtesy © Ça Arquitectura

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Categories: Building, House, Housing Development, Residential, Swimming Pool




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