Location: Tenerife, Islas Canarias, Spain
Design Team: Jorge Díaz, Eloy Fernández
Client: Tenerife Bishopric
Area: 77.15 sqm
Year: 2013
From the
architect. It is
requested to draft a project for a building destined for the Catholic worship,
in the type of a chapel or an hermitage dedicated to Saint John the Baptist.
The temple, according to the requirements of the property, allows a capacity of
40 people and requires a liturgical celebration to be held there weekly. Due to
the current economic shortage, there is requested a building which will
optimize the available limited resources.
The proposed building
adapts to the shape of the plot and as a result of this adaptation a geometrically
uneven or scalene triangle is obtained. Therefore, the chapel is projected in a
plan view as a single volume in a triangular shape, with an access from the
opposite side of the acute angle of the triangle. This way, the space narrows
in the plan and starts to increase in the height, as we approach the altar
(from Latin, altare comes from altus “rise”), which constitutes the main
element of the temple.
At the entrance, there
is situated a baptismal font, surrounded by banks, prepared for the celebration
of this sacrament. This space will also host people that will be standing
during the more populous celebrations. Further, there is located the assembly,
composed of four monolithic banks that emerge from the Gospel wall. The chancel
rises on a two-step platform and is naturally and laterally lit by a gap being
a result of the Epistle wall offset. In this mentioned wall, a Cross Via,
coumpound of 14 crosses recessed in the concrete, is being designed. On the
axis of the chancel, and in dominant position, the altar can be found together
with an ambo, situated on its left, on a lower level. The tabernacle is
available at the very end, aligned with the altar and set into a crack, that
forming a cross carved in the concrete, rises looking for the vertical. At this
point there is a significant overhead light input that describes the space.
Considering the
materials, the construction presents an austerity, the simplicity of the used
materials and the use of resources such as natural lighting, provide the building
with the desirable ascetic caracter. Following this above, the concrete, in
contrast to the rough plaster finishes to “tiroliana” (made of crushed volcanic
stones from the island), together with the interaction of light on them,
constitute the material aspect of the project. And so then, it is prescribed to
use smoothed concrete for the floor of the nave, aggregate concrete for the
volume of the chancel, and granulated exposed concrete for the background of
the altar or the altarpiece and the wall of the Epistle; the granulated
concrete will be lighter on parts that form the cross. The door it is made of
steel structure hidden under sheets of the same material, with large steel
handles cruciforms infront, and recycled wood panels inside.
source : Archdaily
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