The construction of this small chapel was born of the need of the adjacent church to introduce light. Thus, the intervention had to be, in itself, a box for light. A correct answer, a projected space where only the essential is observed, naked and white, takes care of the rest.
The architect Pablo Millán has been in charge of realizing this subtle intervention that loads of emotion the archtectonic space of the Chapel of the Santísimo Sacrament of Martín de la Jara, in Seville.
 

Description of the project by Pablo Millán

To think of a space destined to house the Blessed Sacrament is to think of a very specific area within a temple, the Sancta Santorum, a place for the encounter with God. If we analyze how these spaces have materialized throughout the history of architecture, we observe a radical importance of geometry and strong directionality. Under these premises, Diego de Siloé will design a new renaissance plant for the cathedral of Granada with the sole objective of being an imposing custody or later Leonardo de Figueroa will do the same with the baroque San Luis de losFranceses.

Church repeats in her prayer of Laudes the song of the "Benedictus." The movement of the earth always makes, every hour, in some corner of the world, the night is giving way to clarity and outbreak this prayer. It is the same that, as Luke the Evangelist tells us (Lk 1:78), arose as the praise of the mouth of Zechariah, the father of John the Baptist, when he learned of the next birth of his son, a fact that would change his life, canceling the debt that had left him dumb for his lack of faith.

In this song, almost at the end, it is said "by the tender mercy of our God, the sun that is born from above will visit us." The Light, according to the theological experience of Zechariah comes from above and is the daily test of God's goodness towards his people. Evidence of this truth has undoubtedly been the intention to make a space in which only an opening above shows daily to the parishioners of the chapel that God is with his people.

The construction of this small chapel starts from the need of the adjacent church to introduce light. Thus, the project arises from a single reflection, creating "a box for the Light", with the double meaning of being a box that contains light for the rest of the temple and of being a place that will contain the Light for all Christians: The Blessed Sacrament. The search for light, possibly the most important task of any architect, has become latent in this project by making a container space that, because of its orientation and zenith opening, is capable of introducing clarity throughout the church. Thus, the entire surface will be white and clean. Following this same sense, the floor of the rest of the temple will be changed with the objective of a greater luminosity.

The search for an essential space, naked, without any element that can distort the radically important in a sacramental chapel, has led us to opt for a Franciscan architecture, sober, clean of forms and adornment. The precision sought in a space of these characteristics will be determined by a strict geometry, radical, without any option that can be reason for dispersion. Thus, a concentrated space will be an illuminated and clean space, a space in which the Blessed Sacrament is the center, and in an almost theophanic way, light is proof of it.

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Architect
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Collaborators
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Javier Serrano Terrones, technical architect. Javier Bengoa Díaz, structures.
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Promoter
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Archdiocese of Seville.
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Builder
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Juan Lola Construcciones.
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Material Execution Budget
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€ 67,000.
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Dates
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Start date, October 1, 2016. Completion date, January 30, 2017.
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Location
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Parish of Our Lady of the Rosary. Plaza de Andalucía, 17. Martín de la Jara (Seville).
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Photography
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Pablo Manuel Millán Millán is Doctor Architect by the University of Seville with the thesis 'Inhabiting the cliff: the little convent as a promoter of a new architecture in the hills of Valparaiso.' After completing the "Master in Architecture and Historical Heritage" and the "Master in Management of Latin American and Andalusian Heritage", he has focused his study on the contemporary analysis of historical buildings and structures.

At present, together with the research and teaching activity carried out at the Higher Technical School of Architecture of Seville, he is a researcher at the School of Architecture and Design of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Valparaíso in Chile. Among his recent works, we could highlight the project for the rehabilitation and conservation of the San Francisco de Estepa Convent (Seville), the Rehabilitation of the 16th century Royal Butchers of Porcuna (Jaén), the conservation project of the Greater Sacristy of the Sanctuary of Regla in Chipiona (Cádiz), the restoration of the Monastery of San Juan de la Penitencia in Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) or the restoration of the Chapel in Martín de la Jara (Seville).

He has been awarded with the best academic record by Fundación Caja de Arquitectos; 2nd Europe Architecture Award 2017; Build Architecture Award or recently nominated for the Andrés de Vandelvira awards.

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Published on: February 28, 2017
Cite: "Accuracy, light and reason. Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament by Pablo Millán" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/accuracy-light-and-reason-chapel-blessed-sacrament-pablo-millan> ISSN 1139-6415
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