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.
Kálida Sant Pau Center in Barcelona, Spain by Miralles Tagliabue EMBT
February 23rd, 2020 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Miralles Tagliabue EMBT
The Kálida Centre is a space of emotional, social and practical support for cancer patients and people around them. It is a home opened to everyone, where qualified professionals offer their help. A house to meet other people, a house where to find a quiet retreat or to have a cup of tea.
The plot is located between the new hospital and the original Art Nouveau buildings. It is parallel to a new road defined by the special urban plan of the area and follows the orthogonal plan of the original project. The project includes a small 400 m2 building and a wide garden within the general green area of the building complex. The fundamental idea of the project is to plant some new coloured flowers in the garden of the original hospital, and so the centre is designed as a garden pavilion where the boundaries between interior and exterior blur and vary. The building offers privacy, light, retreat and protection around the garden.
The building is organised in two floors of about 200 m2. The ground floor is situated in a lower level than the complex around. It is conceived as a sequence of flexible spaces, opened to a garden protected by walls, pergolas and vegetation that can accommodate varied activities. In the ground floor we can find the kitchen, a hall and a high ceiling dining room, a small library and a multipurpose room. Every room is surrounded by greenery, and the situation of the patios, trees and pergolas is meant to hide the surrounding hospital facilities and to respect the privacy of the Kálida Centre users. Here in the ground floor is the main access of the building, which has direct connection to the oncology area of the nearby hospital through a paved area between them. This area also allows the access to firefighters in cases of emergency.
The rooms on the upper floor, situated at same height that the rest of the complex, lay around the double-height over the dining room. The façades facing the Art Nouveau buildings towards south are more transparent but protected by wooden blinds to ensure privacy. The building façade is a brick wall with glazed ceramic insertions, put together in a variable composition of colours and textures. The wall turns into a ceramic latticework to filter the Mediterranean sunlight, to focus the views of the environment, to provide air circulation and to protect the privacy of inner spaces.
The whole project has been inspired by the richness of materials, textures, colours, geometries, drawings and greenery of the original Hospital complex. The architect wanted to keep the full original language of Domènech i Montaner’s architecture and so it is reflected in the new gardens, the façades and the roof design.
Notes:
Benedetta Tagliabue studied architecture in Venice (IUAV). She leads the Miralles Tagliabue EMBT office, co-founded in 1994 with Enric Miralles in Barcelona and since 2010 has also an office in Shanghai. Some of her most emblematic buildings are the Scottish Parliament in Edinburgh, Santa Caterina Market in Barcelona and the Spanish Pavilion for the Shanghai Expo in 2010.
Nous Cims is a Catalonian Foundation established in 2013, to achieve high impact social projects in the following fields: young people suffering social exclusion, fight against poverty and health development.
Kálida Foundation was founded in 2016 by Nous Cims to develop Maggie’s model in Catalonia.
The Private Foundation of the Santa Creu i Sant Pau Hospital maintains and improves the Hospital Facilities, especially those designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO.
Maggie’s Centres is a Scottish foundation established in 1996 for the psychological assistance of people with cancer. It has produced 19 buildings across the world designed by renowned architects alongside existing hospital facilities, where a highly skilled staff complement the hospitals’ medical treatments.
This entry was posted
on Sunday, February 23rd, 2020 at 7:10 am.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.