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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.

Arava Aquatic Sport Center in Sapir, Israel by Zait Lev Architects

 
August 26th, 2021 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Zait Lev Architects

In the heart of the Arava region, at the foot of Mount Darga, is the Arava Aquatic Sport Center. The project offers a multi-pool sports facility and community center to the various desert communities of the Arava, and it replaces the single outdoor pools in each of the communities. The structure is used for swimming lessons and competitions, as well as various sports, leisure and recreational classes. It also serves as an open platform for community activities and public events. The project restores part of the historical role of the well: Water as a source of life and a place that allows opportunities for encounters and social activities.

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

  • Architects: Zait Lev Architects
  • Project: Arava Aquatic Sport Center
  • Location: Sapir, Israel
  • Photography: Eyal Tagar
  • Built up area: 3600 sqm. (Land: 3000 sqm, basement: 600 sqm)
  • Project management: Ramon Engineers

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Inspiration

The remains of the Ancient Qumran in the north of the Dead Sea were a source of inspiration for us: The cisterns carved into the rock in a variety of shapes and uses, as well as the harmonious relationship between water and construction, together with the vernacular compactness of the built-up structures.

Water as a building material

The heart of the project is based on a three-dimensional continuous body of water, which “flows” among the construction, allows movement over it in “bridges”, and offers a wide variety of spatial situations between the water and the built structure. The water body is used for a semi-Olympic swimming pool, a children’s pool, a toddlers’ pool, waterfalls, and various types of seating and wading areas.

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

The built structures

Monolithic structures in different dimensions and heights that are arranged around the pools and bodies of water, populate the intimate functions of the project. In addition, the structures respond to the array of public spaces that they create: One of the structures has stands with seats “carved” into it. Another structure serves as a natural cooling tower. Two other structures form the infrastructure for waterfalls that flow on their side walls.

The roof

A lightweight roof is spread between the buildings. In the contact points between the roof and the built masses, there are separations in the form of skylights that contribute to the entrance of indirect natural light. The roof slides from the building to its perimeter and creates a variety of outdoor and shaded spaces around the perimeter of the building. In fact, the structure does not end with the glass vitrine, but continues towards the courtyard. Large sliding doors are arranged into niches and allow the connection of the “interior” of the construction with the balcony and the courtyard to the south.

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Climate and sustainable construction

The positioning of the structure is based on a starting point, according to which all the existing mature trees remain. These trees naturally shade the eastern and western sides, as well as the courtyard, while the lightweight roof shades the northern and southern sides.

In the center of the construction, there is a natural cooling tower, which as a result of pressure differences, creates movement of air from the inside of the building outwards that is cooled in contact with the water.

The large spans of the roof create a static height of up to a meter and a half that constitutes an insulated buffer between the interior and exterior. On the roof, there is an array of photovoltaic collectors.

The project was planned according to the criteria needed to receive the green construction certification.

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Eyal Tagar

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

Image Courtesy © Zait Lev Architects

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Categories: Sports Centre, Sports Complex, Sports Hall, Swimming Pool




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