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Click on images for
larger views.
Sitting on a highly prominent location overlooking the city
of Santo Domingo in Colombia is the Biblioteca Parque Espana,
designed by Giancarlo Mazzanti. The unique, rock-like
form of the building -- split into three
volumes but connected below-grade
-- runs counter to one's notion of iconographic architecture
today: in its formation it tries to look natural, instead
of standing opposed to nature.
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The faceted volumes are clad
in a dark stone whose subtle
gradation and apparently dry stacking give the simulation
of monolithic landforms. Of course the reality could not be
further from this distant evocation. The small diagonal grids
of windows -- especially when reflecting sunlight -- hint
at the spaces behind what is actually a thin skin. Once inside,
one realizes that these windows relate little to the different
spaces (auditorium in one volume, stacks and reading rooms
in the other two) as the floor slabs are pulled
away from the facade. |
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In effect the three volumes are
simple concrete columns and slabs, laterally bracing the external
stone walls. This decision to separate structure and skin
by such a large margin creates some great interstitial
spaces that add to the excitement created by the external
appearance of the library. Mazzanti did not create a one-liner.
He enriched the iconography of the faceted rocks rising from
the landscape by treating the volumes as architectural gems,
if you will. Inside, the simple frame and complex skin interact
in a manner where the latter is always apparent, even though
the former is a mystery from the outside.
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Additionally, the decision to
create a vertical space between the floors and walls at the
perimeter recalls historical library architecture, where the
relationship between center and periphery exudes meaning,
from the books occupying the latter and the reader the former
in Paris's Bibliotheque
Nationale and Erik Gunnar Asplund's Stockholm
Library, to the inverse popular in many libraries today.
But it is the central void of Louis Kahn's Exeter
Library that Mazzanti's design relates to the most, as
he inverts that now iconic design. Where the platonic center
was the void (of knowledge?), now the reader retakes the center
and the void is more confusing, on the periphery and just
out of grasp. A commentary on knowledge in the 21st century?
Maybe, maybe not, but definitely a bold architectural statement
and a wake-up call to the makers of this century's icons. |
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Biblioteca Parque Espana in Santo Domingo, Colombia by Giancarlo Mazzanti |
2008.05.19 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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