|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The
following text and images are courtesy dRN
Architects for their SkiBox Portillo project. Click on
images at left for larger color views.
We were invited by the Hotel
Portillo -- located at el. +3000m in The Andes mountain
range -- to develop a strategy in which the Hotel would locate
its future constructions and facilities beyond the old building.
These included small, dispersed satellites in the mountain
that will protect the stations that accompany the ferry cables
and basic services for skiers and ski patrols. This demanded
a clear constructive strategy, the superposition of two different
constructive layers: a stone podium that would anchor the
building to the ground and a lighter steel and glass box atop
it. The relation of the two structures would be through expanded
joints, making each element independent, and fracturing the
reading of the box.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The parts would be organized
in a clear horizontal stratification, establishing a similarity
with the proportions of the hotel. Finally, visually, we aimed
for a form that had more relation with a technical container
than with the romantic preconception of a mountain cottage.
The first testing of those ideas was made with the construction
of the SkiBox, a programmatic hybrid of 110 m2 with toilets
for skiers, a cafeteria and an office for ski patrols.
|
|
|
|
 |
|
The toilets are located on the
first floor, inside the podium that settles the construction
with the irregular topography. The extended proportion of
the wall lightens its relation with the superior box, uniting
it to the landscape. The stone used is obtained from the site
and was worked without greater precision, helping to dilute
the volume in the surrounding landscape in the months without
snow. |
|
|
|
 |
|
In a second level, over the podium,
are arranged the office for the ski patrols, a small warehouse,
and the cafeteria. The box is constructed with a steel structure,
oxidized steel boards, and glass. The color of oxide resembles
the color of rocks of the mountain, so although there is a
contrast between the defined geometry of the volume and the
landscape, there is a chromatic affinity with it. The gap
between the boards accentuates the idea of a construction
by layers, the same way in which mountain clothes are made.
The inert materials, rock and steel, will age well under the
extreme climatic conditions of the mountain. Their sediments
will add the benefit of time. |
| |
|
|
SkiBox Portillo in Portillo, Chile
by Del Río-Núñez Architects |
2007.01.22 |
|
| |
|
Click
on images below for larger views.
|
| |
|
|
|