Arqmov Workshop

Just BE Apartments

Arqmov Workshop
19. January 2016
Photo: Rafael Gamo
Photo: Rafael Gamo

Arqmov approached this commission by first considering some particular characteristics of the site, especially its location on the corner of two streets with different energies and different impacts both for residents and the casual passer-by. Benjamin Hill Avenue is an important circulation artery for cars, bicycles and pedestrians, as well as being an access way to and from the neighborhood; it is also used occasionally for a local tradition - the market on wheels. In contrast, the Calle Reynosa is a very narrow street that only serves as residential access.

Photo: Rafael Gamo

Given these conditions two distinct fronts were proposed: on Benjamin Hill Avenue a front that is partially screened by a wooden lattice, and towards Calle Reynosa a front that is open to the street through long balconies and a full height glass curtain wall. Arqmov considered the social life and urban activity of the area as vital elements that serve to integrate the building into its context.

Photo: Rafael Gamo

As a reference for the design, Arqmov have recalled a particular object that relates to street life in the area: a box made of wooden slats often used to carry vegetables, known in Mexico as 'huacal'. This element suggests enclosure and isolation and, at the same time, the openness and movement characteristic of a market on wheels.

Photo: Rafael Gamo

The design brief required a minimum open area, which Arqmov solved by means of two voids with clearly defined functions: one that hosts the secondary access by means of vertical circulation (an open staircase) and supplies air flow, and another void that creates views towards the Culture Fund and, at the same time, generates cross-ventilation to the interior of each apartment and allows natural light from all directions. Internal balconies were added towards this inner void.

Photo: Rafael Gamo

The building floats over a basement level that houses the carpark. At the street corner, a small public space was created with an informal seating arrangement made up of wooden cubes against a red tiled wall which lights up at night, creating a welcoming meeting place for the public. It is interesting to watch passers-by, whether on foot, by car or bike, interact with this space and with the active context surrounding it. The building responds well to the constant dynamics of the cultural, commercial and entertainment area that is Colonia Condesa.

Photo: Rafael Gamo
Photo: Rafael Gamo
Site Plan (Drawing: Arqmov Workshop)
Architectural Layout (Drawing: Arqmov Workshop)
Section and Main Facade (Drawing: Arqmov Workshop)
Reynosa Street Facade (Drawing: Arqmov Workshop)

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