Park Pavilion

The initial commission for this project entailed the design of a typical sales showroom for a new urban-scale real estate development. The development is set on a hilly expanse across the emblematic Tangamanga Park in San Luis Potosí, Mexico.

Through the design process and analysis, it was clear the project possed a great opportunity to reimagine the program in order to create a building that would be an icon in the land at first, to then become part of a bigger complex of buildings allowing the use of its spaces to be adaptable and secure a permanent lifespan for the community to come.

photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto
photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto

The resulting program and formal solution creates an intimate link with the site’s hilly nature and the views from it to the park across the boulevard. Access to the building is set to happen at the top of the hill where the building meets the terrain as a park, gently slopping up and guiding visitors to a viewing terrace where the city and park views are framed. People then come down between concrete sculptural walls to find a welcoming lobby and interior spaces. The interior cross-section of the building keeps with the notion of a hill, introducing an amphitheater and double-height space that provides an ever-changing and dynamic flow. The amphitheater will serve to host lectures, presentations, and entertainment while support spaces include coworking and exhibit spaces, lounges, a catering kitchen, and offices.

photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto
photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto

The materiality transitions from the stereotomic character of the concrete forms that meet the terrain to the lighter perforated skin and glass that engages with natural light and views of the surroundings. The binary language expresses its relation to the interior program, being the solid what houses the more private spaces and the permeable what envelops the collective gatherings. The experience of the building is constantly transformed with the passing of time and light.

The project became disruptive, as it also changed the way in which developers can think about how they engage a site and the future inhabitants of the communities they build. It also provides a new way in which to have temporary sale structures with little or no architectural value to become permanent buildings of clear identity, financial viability, and constant transformation.

photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto
photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto

Team:
Architect: Materia + Gustavo Carmona
Collaborators: Gustavo Xoxotla, Karla Uribe, Jovana Grujevska, Marisol      Fernández, Ana Fernández, Erick Pérez, Eduardo Valencia, Carlos Pineda, Fernanda Mendez
Interiors: Karla Cortina Studio
Photography: Jaime Navarro Soto
Client: Inmobilia

photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto
photo_credit Jaime Navarro Soto
Jaime Navarro Soto

Material Used:
1. Noken: Acro Compact WC / 100160761
2. Noken: Urban C Paper Holder / 100094163
3. Duravit: Vanity Basin / 030549
4. Illux: Downlight / TH-1226.N
5. Illux: Spotlight / TL-3510.RZNCAN30
6. Dupuis: San Miguelito Butaca / 1119622
7. Boconcept: Curious Lamp / 105030000500

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Project credits

Architects
Architects
Photographers

Product spec sheet

Lighting
Downlight TH-1226.N Spotlight TL-3510.RZ... by ILLUX
Vanity basin
Vanity Basin 030549 by Duravit
Lamp
Curious Lamp by BoConcept
Manufacturers
San Miguelito Butaca by Dupuis

Project data

Project Year
2022
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