Architects: Rojkind Arquitectos
Location: Eje 1 Poniente (Av. México-coyoacán),
Xoco, Benito Juarez, 03330 MexicoCity, Federal District, MexicoFounding Partner: Michel
RojkindPartner: Gerardo SalinasProject Team: Gerardo Villanueva, Barbara Trujillo,
Alfredo Hernández, Diego Leal, Andrea León, Rodrigo Medina, Philipp Schlauch,
Beatriz Zavala, Birgit Hammer, Juan Manuel Ortuño, David Stalin, Alonso de la
Fuente, Rafael Cedillo, Arie Willem de Jongh, Victor Martínez, Adrian Aguilar,
David GuardadoMedia: Monique Rojkind, Cynthia Cardenas,
Dolores Robles, Rosalba RojasArea: 49000.0 sqmYear: 2014Interior Design Team: Isaac Smeke, Felipe Castañeda, Emilia Franssen, Alejandra Hernández
Interior Design Collaboration: Esrawe Studio
Structural Engineering: CTC Ingenieros
Roof Structure Engineering: Studio NYL
Mep: IPDS
Landscape Consultant: Ambiente Arquitectos
A/V Consultant: Auerbach Pollock Friedlander
Acoustical Consultant: Seamonk
Lighting Consultant: Ideas y Proyectos en Luz
Graphic Design: Citrico + Welcome Branding
Interior Design Principal: Alberto
Villareal Bello
From the
architect. Since its reopening, the Cineteca Nacional Siglo XXI
attendance numbers continue to surprise with a total of 806,803 viewers in 2013
-an increase of 29.22% compared to the previous year and with 1,287 more movies
screened-.A 10-month construction schedule set by political times put the
construction team in a fast track mode to finish the project before President
Felipe Calderón left office in December 2012.
As a result, some aspects of the
project were postponed or canceled in order to get it done in time for an
official ceremony. Luckily, and not common in projects that transcend from one
administration to the another in Mexico, the new government administration has
committed to finishing the work according to the original design and see the
project come to its full completion. The work is expected to be completed by
the end of the summer.
Even though the project is not fully executed, the design team
is enthusiastic about how it has already changed the community. “It’s a very
democratic, very social space,” says Gerardo Salinas partner at Rojkind
Arquitectos. “When we proposed this idea originally, the government authorities
were very doubtful that areas like the outdoor amphitheater could be used by
everyone—affluent people as well as people with less resources.” But that is
precisely what has happened, he says.
Located in the southern
quadrant of Mexico City, the National Film Archive and Film Institute of Mexico
is home to the most important film heritage of Latin America. Its campus
occupied an underutilized site of considerable dimensions within the strangled
town of Xoco. This historic town, once surrounded by agricultural land, now
sits deep within the urban sprawl and faces extinction due to economic and
political pressures from developers and municipal authorities which covet its
privileged location.
The existing
complex dated from 1982, when a fire destroyed part of the campus and most of
its archive, and was a “temporary” facility never well suited for its purpose.
Additionally, thousands of people cross the grounds daily as they walked to and
from one of the city’s nearby metro station, Estación Metro Coyoacan. Facing
total renewal, Cineteca’s original project brief included the expansion and
renovation of the existing complex incorporating additional vault space and
four more screening rooms.
But in response to the immediate urban condition, additional
restorative work needed to be done to reclaim part of the site as public space,
give relief to the dense new-development- filled surroundings of Xoco and
accommodate the constant flow of pedestrians and casual visitors. First,
surface parking was consolidated into a six story structure freeing 40% of the
site. Then the pedestrian friendly “back entrance”, located across the street
from the historic town’s cemetery, was reactivated –70% of Cineteca patrons use
public transportation
and arrive by foot–. The reclaimed space now houses the new program organized along two axes, one perpendicular to the street of Real Mayorazgo becoming the main pedestrian entrance and the other perpendicular to Av. México-Coyoacán for both car and pedestrian access. The axes intersection became a new 80m x 40m public plaza sheltered from the weather by a hovering canopy connecting the existing complex with the new screening rooms.
Clad in composite aluminum panels, with varied size triangular
perforations, the roof structure wraps around the new screening rooms and
becomes their façade. The sheltered space functions as the foyer for the old
and new screening rooms and can accommodate additional program options such as
concerts, theater, exhibitions, etc.
“We didn’t want it to feel like you’re in
the lobby of a commercial cinema, we wanted it to feel more like a university
campus, with everything floating in a park” says design principal Michel
Rojkind.
An outdoor amphitheater,
extensive landscaping and new retail spaces were added to the original program
expanding the possibilities for social and cultural interaction and exchanges,
and giving the complex a university campus feel.
The new screening rooms
seat 180 each and the existing screening rooms were updated with current
technology. Overall the complex can now seat 2,495 visitors in indoor theaters.
The outdoor amphitheater has a 750-person capacity. Two new film vaults were
also added to the site, increasing Cineteca’s archive capacity by 50,000 reels
of film. Parking capacity was also increased by 25% to a total of 528 cars.
The
thousands of people that use the grounds everyday now find welcoming
unrestricted public space: commuters still walk back and forth across the
campus in the morning and evening, medical staff from a nearby hospital stop by
to eat their lunches at noon, students hang out at the park in the afternoon,
and moviegoers attend free outdoor events in the evening.
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