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Click
on images for larger views. [Google Earth link]
Located on the banks of the Capibaribe River in Brazil, on
the grounds of the Brennand
Ceramics factory, studio, and museum is the Chapel of
Our Lady of the Conception. The design by Paulo Mendes da
Rocha reuses a 19th-century building of masonry and tile in
a manner that separates old from new yet acknowledges the
dependence of the latter upon the former.
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Of the designs four main gestures,
the first visible one is the exterior cladding of the existing
masonry walls. The flat white surfaces, coupled with the partially
recreated colonnade at the
building's four corners, give the appearance of abstracted
elevations, though one notices that the apertures respect
the existing shapes and sizes of the openings. |
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The next gesture one encounters is
the "transparent crystal casing"
that rings the chapel space a few feet inside the existing masonry
walls. These glass walls subtly demarcate old from new, in effect
describing the new use of the space in invisible lines. (Click
for plan.) The gap between the old and new also creates access
to the choir platform, though
perhaps most interesting is the fact these walls are only partial
height, so combined with the masonry openings the building is
an open-air chapel of sorts. |
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The third gesture is the most
overt: the new concrete roof supported by two large circular
columns at both ends of the space. The flat prestressed slab
is cantilevered above the existing walls to create a dramatic
horizontal gap. Lastly, at least in terms of this discussion,
is the bell tower, a new concrete piece that distances itself,
like everything else above, from the existing building. Its
intended and symbolic function aside, the tower serves a surprising
function: it exhibits the collection and reuse of rainwater
from the new concrete roof (visible in section
A-A), in a way that celebrates the natural cycles like
the chapel celebrates its own cycles. |
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Chapel of Our Lady of the Conception in Recife, Brazil
by Paulo Mendes da Rocha |
2008.02.25 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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