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Click on images at left larger views.
The Russo Club in Talca, Chile is a strange hybrid of functions
belied by its simple and straightforward name. Architects
Felipe
Assadi + Francisca Pulido admit that they never fully
understood the program, which includes a "yard to perform
events, a semi-olympic pool, a multiuse room with a strong
trend to be a disco, but that during the day would be an office,
a bar that at the same time is a gift shop, a restaurant,...offices
rented to other companies, a training room and an internet
sector for the employees."
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The architects describe their
solution as, "a bar of several programs supported by
a great emptiness that (dis)orders it using the artificial
light, all of this inside a low density block and a continual
façade in the city of Talca." The emptiness and
the long volumes (bars) are apparent in the image at left,
with the project's fit into its context visible in the first
image. Apparently, the architects' response is a formally
simple infill project that relates to its context via its
massing, though buries the uses within, breaking the functions
from the surroundings, in what feels like a secluded oasis. |
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Much of the effort is expended
on this outdoor room, with
its "yard to perform events" and pool. The composition
of solid and void rectangular volumes is especially appealing
at night, when a random patterning of light is emitted through
the dark walls bracketing two sides of the space. The long
side sits across from the restaurant
and a second-floor exterior corridor
defined by vertical, sliding
red panels that provide a stronger definition for the outdoor
space an an increased sense of layering of the building's
spaces. |
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Given the program's apparently
strange hybrid of functions that attempts to find an almost
24-hour use for the investment in new construction, the solution
seems to focus on the nightlife, creating a luxurious indoor
and outdoor atmosphere strengthened by colors
and materials. It's a design that would easily be at home
in Los Angeles or Miami, especially since the project turns
its back to its surroundings, presenting not only solid walls
but vertical steel bars, giving the impression of fortification
while hinting at the good times within.
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Russo Club in Talca, Chile
by Felipe Assadi + Francisca Pulido Architects |
2007.08.27 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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