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Click
on images for larger color views.
Appended to a factory for the manufacture of office furniture,
the showroom and design center for Ofimodul Company in Monterrey,
Mexico is a small intervention (272sm | 2,927sf) that illustrates
both the first and last stages in the furniture-making process.
Designed by stación-ARquitectura
Arquitectos with associate architect Armando Cantú,
the intervention addresses both existing conditions, the factory
to the side and the parking below, in a simple yet creative
manner.
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The design is basically a bar
raised above a handful of parking spaces via a concrete shear
wall, a freestanding column and some columns embedded in walls.
The last aids in the lightweight appearance of the glass box,
as do the exterior walls that extend to the bottom of the
concrete slab, putting it on display unlike the solid cornice
that create a strong horizontal
above the operable windows. An access
stair from the parking below is about all that remains
of this appendage, a minimal construction that would easily
fail a code review in other locales. |
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But a look at the floor
plans and building sections
illustrates that the projecting glass bar of the showroom
is only half the story. Embedded inside the factory building
is the design center. Where the showroom is open and glazed,
the design center is partitioned
and painted. Accessed from the showroom by a few steps,
one moves past a service zone to the offices and workstations
that occupy a space about equal to the showroom, a subtle
balancing of importance of the two stages. From the design
center employees have a view of the factory floor, yet without
the noise disturbance, like watching one's car being washed
-- a memory I have from childhood. |
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With such a small intervention
and a minimal palette, the small things make a big difference.
The way the glass wall slides past the concrete shear wall
towards the stair and the unenclosed space above is one such
detail. This maneuver not only provides continuity to the
bar, it also extends the realm of the showroom beyond the
structure in the small gap
between the two perpendicular walls. This is a subtle acknowledgment
of the movement of the goods from the showroom to the buyers'
homes and offices. Ofimodul have constructed an intervention
that sums up their process while situating it within the larger
picture.
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Showroom Ofimodul in Monterrey, Mexico
by stación-ARquitectura Arquitectos |
2009.07.13 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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