lunes, 3 de abril de 2017
Remembering Zaha Hadid, one year after her death
Remembering Zaha Hadid, one year after her death: Her creative genius won't be forgotten.
lunes, 20 de febrero de 2017
El MoMA de Nueva York incorpora una obra de arquitecto canario Fernando Menis
El MoMA de Nueva York incorpora una obra de arquitecto canario Fernando Menis: Se trata del proyecto de la Iglesia del Santísimo Redentor de Las Chumberas, en el municipio tinerfeño de La Laguna. En la colección permanente del MOMA también hay piezas de los artistas canarios Manolo Millares y Óscar Domínguez
lunes, 13 de febrero de 2017
El Tanque, The Concrete Ring and El Tanque Environment, 20 year of good architecture
Cultural
Space El Tanque
The
Cultural Space “El Tanque” is an old oil refinery tank built in the '50s of the
XXth century. The preservation of this industrial heritage facility in its
original location, in the Cabo Llanos neighborhood of Santa Cruz de Tenerife,
was decided in 1997, when the urban growth of the city converted the former
industrial area occupied by the CEPSA refinery in a residential neighborhood. It
was Fernando Menis himself who promoted the idea of preserving one of those
crude deposits by showing the exemplarity of a singular piece of industrial
character. Today it is an unusual and unrepeatable framework of culture and has
become a vestige of the industrial memory of the city reaching in 2017 twenty
years as a cultural space.
El
Tanque's design signed by a team of architects led by Fernando Menis was based
on keeping the essential and original aspect of the container; it offered an
elementary solution to the need for access and sought for achieving the
constructive quality of a timeless piece of work. The design used recycled
materials retrieved from the dismantled refinery itself and created between the
two existing walls (the one of the base of the tank and the one of the safety
bucket that surrounds it) a ramp shaped facility which nests the reception area
with a small vestibule, an information desk and toilets. The entrance of
El Tanque, located four meters below its
interior pavement is marked by a five meters width swing door made of
unpolished steel (also recycled from a nearby dismantled deposit).
The
gentle ramp of the pavement, together with the roof and side walls, compose a
space of a marked perspective, which provides a great visual depth to this
access path. The low height of the space that starts at the door and continues
all the way under the foundation of the old tank produces a heavy pressure
effect on the visitor, prior to their actual entrance into the tank, which is
done through a second steel ramp (also recycled from other dismantled tanks),
and acts as an initiatory stage of preparation for entering into the monumental
interior of the industrial space.
As
the dismantling of the refinery progressed, materials were being reused: large
sheets that gave way to the swing door, lighting towers that illuminate now El
Tanque's outside, old drums turned into low cost skylights, and an endless
number of small elements that found new uses. Some scrap items were even
recycled for the House MM staircase, which Fernando Menis was building at the
time.
As
a complement, another foreign object is rescued and added to this project, an
old passenger finger retrieved from the Port of Santa Cruz de Tenerife, which
is here decontextualized and serves as footbridge for access from the street.
Its
physical and functional possibilities have made possible its incorporation into
the city as a cultural space and exhibition hall, a cylindrical void that can
be freely occupied by artistic installations of different nature, offering an
unusual multifunctional space of cultural activities.
A celebration
ring for El Tanque
On
the occasion of the 15th anniversary of the space, the Association of Friends
of the Cultural Space El Tanque commissioned Fernando Menis to design a
commemorative piece. Based on El Tanque's irregular circle shaped ground floor,
the architect decided to make a ring, as a geometric and conceptual abstraction
of this space. It was made of reinforced concrete, manually, in a limited edition
of 150 units.
For
jewelry use, one of the smallest pieces that exist of this combination of
materials, generally used in architecture, reinforced concrete has been studied
and investigated to behave optimally in the small dimensions of the rings, thought
out and produced as a small-scale building. The rings were adapted to the shape
of the fingers, after studying the angles, materials, textures and finishes to
achieve an attractive, comfortable and unique piece.
The
area through which the Tank is accessed, symbolically transferred to the ring,
has materialized with Swarovski jewelry that comes out from the concrete,
symbolizing the cultural energy that the Tank hides inside, and which springs
to the outside thanks to the void which leaves the concrete. The wide variety
of colors, brightness and facets that crystals can adopt are intended to
reflect the great quantity and variety of shows that have come together in El
Tanque in these fifteen years of life as a cultural space.m The inner circular
void of the Tank, where all the artistic manifestations take place, have been
preserved in the ring in its forms and proportions, using this central vacuum
to introduce the finger that carries the ring, suggesting the user is the last
artistic manifestation of this cultural space.
El Tanque Environment
Coinciding
with the 20th anniversary of this cultural space, currently declared an
industrial heritage building, Fernando Menis has been commissioned the next
stage concerning the rehabilitation of the environment of the Cultural Space
"El Tanque":
Menis's
design for the environment proposes to cover the entire perimeter of El Tanque
with banana trees plantations as a way to rehabilitate the historical
agricultural landscape that existed in these lands prior to the installation of
the refinery CEPSA in this area in the 1930s. This design tries to reach
something beyond mere conservation and reuse, it aims to enabling the visitor
to perceive the traces of history and understand its evolution. This landscape
design involves a botanical approach that seeks a magic effect, as if nature invaded
the industrial ruins and gained the overwhelming presence of this ancient and
huge oil tank. It is meant to provoke the viewer to a kind of romantic worship
towards those industrial ruins now reused for the art.
Mostly
there will be trees of Musa Paradisiaca,
some 700 units. The common names of Musa
Paradisiaca are banana, banana trees, and belong to the family of the Musaceae. They grow fast, with a height
of up to 7 meters, and usually bloom in the summer. They require a location
facing the sun so the chosen place is ideal for its climatology. Inside the
perimeter of the original wall of the tank, cypress trees will be planted,
which, like the great majority of conifers, are evergreen, reaching a height of
20 m with a diameter of about 60 cm. Pyramid shaped and fast growing the cypresses
will allow, since their early life, enjoying a green environment.
In
addition, responding to current needs of the space managers and its users, the
new project proposes to complement the services of the cultural space with the
creation of a storage area, toilets and a cafeteria.
miércoles, 11 de enero de 2017
El Festival de Musica de Canarias se traslada al Espacio Cultural El Tanque
Este próximo domingo día 15 de enero comenzamos la celebración del 20 aniversario del Espacio Cultural El Tanque con un concierto organizado por el Festival de Música de Canarias. Están todos invitados.
https://festivaldemusicadecanarias.wordpress.com/2017/01/11/los-sonidos-por-imaginar-pedro-barboza-y-el-patchwork-ensemble/
https://festivaldemusicadecanarias.wordpress.com/2017/01/11/los-sonidos-por-imaginar-pedro-barboza-y-el-patchwork-ensemble/
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