ArchShowcase 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. Hangar Baltt by PJV Arquitetura in Penha, Santa Catarina State, BrazilApril 30th, 2021 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Pablo José Vailatti This project began after ordering from a customer who wanted to build a hangar to house aircraft and related machines. The chosen place was the land where his country house is located, with a large area and strong relationship with nature. It is easily accessible by road BR-101.
he hangar was installed in the northern portion of the terrain, on a free plateau surrounded by mountains and abundant vegetation in the background. Two premises guided the project: the reuse of the structure of a pre-cast shed that had been dismantled and the use of concrete blocks, which would be produced by the customer. On the ground floor, there are a hangar maintenance shop, toilets and a double stud. On the second level there is an office with a balcony that leads into the shed and a glass panel that frames the landscape. On the third and last level there is a meeting room with a large table and two pilot flats, which allows independent access through an existing circular staircase at the back of the building. The main materials used in this work were: reused pre-cast structure, concrete ceilings, concrete blocks, PVC frames, black granite, lattice panel slab and iron. On the outside, the pre-cast structure was painted black, which frames the blocks in reddish concrete. Internally, all materials were painted white, providing the environment with amplitude, cleanliness and homogeneity characteristics. In the construction of the block annexed to the shed, concrete blocks were used, in two different sizes and different finishing. The larger reddish 15 centimeters wide block was used to close the shed and for most of the internal and external walls. Gray colored 10 centimeters wide blocks were used on some internal walls and at the junction between the windows on the south façade. All the structural work, both the building hardware and concrete, as well as hydraulic and electrical piping were passed through the concrete blocks. For rainwater runoff, for example, were used 75 mm diameter pipes, which descend vertically inside the blocks. This is a project that explores industrial design. It is a work that clearly exposes its constructive technology, by reusing pre-fabricated elements already used in other works and that uses the concrete block as the main element in the construction, sometimes as a structure, or simply as a closure. Contact PJV Arquitetura
|