建筑设计:Covachita
地点:墨西哥,新莱昂州,San Pedro Garza Garcia
设计主持:Fernando Aguilar, Roberto Nunez, Ana Cantu, Diana Trevno
占地面积:50平米
设计时间:2012年
摄影:Fernando Aguilar, Roberto Nunez, Ana Cantu, Diana Trevino
工作室的设计项目灵感来自于探索城市土地的不同使用方法。土地商业化征收强迫人们不得不接受面对现有土地的不利条件加以利用。该系统通过投机运行迫使土地所有者不得不在商业条例和房租价格上动脑筋。
使用预制构件材料建设的柔性结构,起初为了提供购买者公平竞争环境。
然而,不同的理论随着时间的流逝不断演进。在这项工程中,当地的非正式居民点成为设计师灵感的来源。
正是住宅中加入工作室的设计,让这座看似普通的住宅吸引了无数游人和专家驻足观赏。
设计者初衷想建造一座可以折叠的房子,而这点在当地是不合规章的,这也激起了人们对于现行规章的质疑,
让人们更加理性谨慎的对待现在章程。那么,现在呈现在我们面前的非典型城市里的一切真的能够说服人们自觉遵守吗?
Architects: Covachita
Location: San Pedro Garza Garcia, Nuevo Leon, Moxico
Architect In Charge: Fernando Aguilar, Roberto Nunez, Ana Cantu, Diana Trevino
Area: 50 sqm
Project Year: 2012
Photography: 18•26 Agencia de Fotografia
The workshop project was born from the idea of finding alternatives to land use in the city. The imposition of a rigid system of commercialization of land forces people to always have to negotiate at a disadvantage. This system processes on the speculation that the owner of the land kidnaps the regulations of sale and rent prices.
A flexible structure that uses prefabricated materials for its construction, initially it proposes a level playing field from speculation for the buyer, in that the negotiation is not for the total and definitive impact on the property, but for the possibilities of establishing ephemeral, mutable and evolving settlements.
Various theories have cemented their bases in the possibility of creating settlements that may evolve over time. In this case, informal settlements have been the inspiration for this intervention, the negotiation of a rented property which completes itself with the insertion of the workspace in the landscape, limiting the impact on the land and of the watchful eyes of the authorities.
The “illegality” of this project which is bases on the idea of a collapsible shade, open up the discussion about the current regulations that govern our cities, which have simply limited their possibilities, resulting in exclusive or worse yet terribly boring cities and towns. Could the possibilities presented by the informal city, be even more attractive that anything that has been presented to date?
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