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Click
on images at left for larger color views. [Google Earth link]
Part of the Canary Islands chain, Tenerife is known for the
volcanic crater at its center, a strong influence on residents
of the island and AMP
Arquitectos, who have crafted a body of work that is rooted
in its place and possesses a weight rarely found in much contemporary
architecture, unfortunately. Their design for the Instituto
Rafael Arozarena in La Orotava is no different, composed of
overlapping, concrete bars and a detached athletics facility
in a valley setting.
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Access to the school is via a
parking lot to the west or a footbridge on the south, the
latter primarily for students after being dropped off. From
this high, entry level --
containing offices and the library -- the building descends
down the slope, the lowermost
portion being the detached gymnasium,
its curved roof the apparent antithesis to the strong horizontality
of the rest of the school. Movement up and down the slope
is achieved via a stair tower
that projects like a prow, creating a vertical accent in the
building's horizontal banding. |
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From the top level to the bottom
a slight gradation in the concrete's coloring is apparent,
from a slate to a dark green. This change of color continues
to the left and right of the stair tower, as if it is a fulcrum
about which a change from red to blue to green takes place.
This coloring extends to the treatment of the classrooms,
which feature gray concrete occasionally set off by bright
splashes of color. The overall, pigmented color treatment
of the concrete helps break down the scale of the large school,
create a pleasing environment for the students, and give the
project a distinctive presence on the hillside. |
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The almost rainbow of colors
for the building's concrete exterior -- banded with operable
louvers at the classrooms and retractable shades at the corridors
-- sits atop rough stone walls that help anchor the school
to its site. This weightiness is a refreshing antidote to
the lightness and transparency popular in architecture today,
where buildings try to dissolve or become immaterial. AMP
Arquitectos, in the words
of David Cohn, "offer an architecture resistant to this
erosion, an architecture which returns us to a material, existential
world of experience and being."
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Instituto Rafael Arozarena in La Orotava, Tenerife by
AMP Arquitectos |
2007.07.02 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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