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Click on images for larger views. [Google Earth link]
Situated on 35 acres (14 hectares) of Montjuic Mountain --
adjacent to the Olympic Stadium -- is the Botanical
Garden of Barcelona. designed by an interdisciplinary
team comprising the architects Carlos Ferrater and Josep Lluís
Canosa, the landscape architect Bet Figueras, the horticulturalist
Artur Bossy and the biologist Joan Pedrola, the garden is
a geometric response to the sloping site and its views over
the city to the sea.
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An integral component of the
garden is the Barcelona
Botanical Institute designed by Carlos
Ferrater. Where the architect's contribution to the garden
used triangles to group plantings, create paths, and work
with the contours of the mountain, the Institute sits in opposition,
a linear bar at a corner of
the garden. The architect calls it "a horizontal line
that crosses the sloping natural terrain like a hinge between
two topographical datums." |
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The siting of the building at
the high point of the garden gives the users not only the
most generous views of the
city and beyond, but a full view of the vegetation at the
building's feet, something aided by the long orientation and
transparency of the plan.
In addition to the generous glazing, the building is composed
simply of concrete and wood, the former for the ground floor
and structure and the latter for the projecting second floor
which hangs from the concrete beams that give a rhythm to
the extra-long elevation. |
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The way the architect purposefully
set the Institute building in direct opposition to the garden
design illustrates that the architect based the building design
on what was appropriate for the program, rather than trying
to match or extend something done previously, something with
its own intent and purpose. This strategy is common but deserves
clarification and praise, as it denies strategies like the
branding of an architect's style, while searching for ideal
solutions to various problems.
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Barcelona Botanical Institute in Barcelona,
Spain by Carlos
Ferrater |
2007.10.08 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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