In the Sumaco Biosphere Reserve, located in the Ecuadorian Amazon, in the municipality of Huaticocha, province of Orellana, the architecture studio Al Borde has designed a community library named Yuyarina Pacha, which in Kichwa means "Time-Space to Think."

The project arose thanks to the creation of a pilot education project in 2019 by the Sarawarmi Creative Laboratory and Witoca. A reading club was created for children's learning and due to its success the need arose to create a library.

The need for a library and a space for community meetings led the Al Borde studio to divide the program into three floors. The ground floor, intended for art and science workshops, becomes a space for informal meetings and events for the association. The first open floor houses the shelves of books and bibliographic collections to which children have access. On the top floor, users can enjoy a reading table, as well as a space for digital resources.

The project employs the ancestral practices of the area by constructing the structure of the building with Chonta, a type of palm from the Amazon, known for its incredible durability and resistance.

In addition to using this material, used for the construction of vernacular homes thanks to its ability to be anchored directly to the ground without the need for waterproof protection, straw is used for the construction of the roof in response to the rainy climate of the region.

Community library Remember Time by Al Borde. Photograph by JAG Studio.

Project description by Al Borde

Yuyarina Pacha means 'Space-Time to Think' in Kichwa. This project is located in the community of Huaticocha, in the buffer zone of the Sumaco Biosphere Reserve, in the Ecuadorian Amazon. In 2019, the Laboratorio Creativo Sarawarmi and Witoca, an agricultural association focused on coffee in the community of Huaticocha started a pilot non-formal education project with local children. What began as a reading club quickly evolved into a space for holistic learning. The library and reading club are more than just a place to look at books; they are a safe space where local children can learn, play and create.

The reading club was a great success. The small space in which it was held needed to become a full-fledged library, and since there was no community meeting space available, it also needed to fulfill that function. These needs led to the final configuration of the project, where the program is divided into three floors: An open ground floor for art and science workshops that involves water, plastics, food, etc., which also serves as a space for informal events for the Association and other spontaneous gatherings; a first floor for activities without water, where the bibliographic collections are housed and children can access the books in an open shelf format; this is one of the Association's largest spaces, so meetings and other activities are also held there; and a second floor focused on digital languages, where tablets and computers are used to store audio collections of stories aimed at preserving the community's oral memory; it also houses the magazine collection, which can be enjoyed at a balcony reading table connected to the central void of the first floor.

Biblioteca comunitaria Yuyarina Pacha por Al Borde. Fotografía por JAG Studio.
Community library Remember Time by Al Borde. Photograph by JAG Studio.

The main structure of the project is made of Chonta, an Amazonian palm known for its incredible durability and strength. For generations, traditional houses in the region have relied on Chonta for construction, as its structure can be anchored directly into the ground without the need for waterproofing. The architecture embraces the pragmatic value of the region's ancestral building practices and adapts them to contemporary needs.

In this architecture, millimetric precision is a challenge because the materials are organic and irregular. Therefore, the design takes into account potential variations and adapts to the imperfections of the materials. The thatched roof, characterized by its steep pitch, responds to the region's rainy climate. For the library, a glass skylight was incorporated into the ridge, which not only provides natural overhead lighting, but also facilitates the construction and maintenance of the project. The ridge of a thatched roof is the most complex part to build and requires the most care and maintenance.

This community project is a commitment to durability and self-management. The appropriation of the site began with a local event even before construction was completed. The Yuyarina Pacha Community Library is not only a space for knowledge, but also a testimony to the ability of rural communities to take charge of their own development, despite being neglected by the state, and to a culture that maintains a more harmonious relationship with the place it inhabits.

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Architecture collaborators.- María Fernanda Heredia, Melissa Narváez, Laura Jager.
Structural Engineering.- Patricio Cevallos.
Planimetry.- Graphic Expression, Santiago Pistone Chair, UNR, Argentina. Coordinators.- Manuel Cucurell, Luciano Stechina, Lisandro Crivari. Graphic Production.- Agustin Perez, Cristhian Ruiz Diaz, Camila Perez Tornatti, Catalina Costa, Valentina Fernández.
Others.-  Sarawarmi Laboratorio Creativo. Ana María Durán, «Architectures of the Collective» Yale School of Architecture, Students.- Yuyi Zhoy y Huy Truong. Comunidades de Huaticocha y San José de Dahuano. Línea de Fomento de Arquitectura Vernácula y Memoria Social del INPC. Fondo Educativo de World Connect. Indimark. Crowfunding. 

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Witoca.

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AsoAmazonas, Weavers led by Carlos HuatatocaDeveloper Promoter.

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186.32 sqm.

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Project.- 2023.
Construction.- August 2023 – January 2024.

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Huaticocha, Provincia de Orellana, Ecuador.

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Al Borde (Malu Borja, David Barragán, Esteban Benavides, Pascual Gangotena) was founded in 2007. The team from Ecuador impresses with its poetic interpretation of the constructive foundations of building. They analyze needs, design financing concepts and implement products. High-quality architecture in Ecuador can only be created by architects with a great sense of commitment.

Al Borde is a collaborative and experimental architectural study that focuses on solving real needs on the basis of available material, being this social or physical. As the 'bricoleur' ​​in the mind of French anthropologist Levi Strauss, the group works with what it has at its disposal, re-combining the pre-existing in a basic, logical, simple way, without prejudice. The work is done from the specific complexity of the problem but with a holistic perspective, an exploration that has led interdisciplinary collaborations with musicians, artists, performers, designers, publicists, etc. The strength of their buildings lies in their pojectual ability to combine objective architectural responses to subjective user perceptions resulting in hybrid constructive systems that combines the traditional with the contemporary, also integrating the management of social and community energy to carry out their work.

David Barragán and Pascual Gangotena, who founded the studio in 2007 in Quito, now joined Marialuisa Borja and Esteban Benavides. Al Borde has given lectures and workshops nationally and internationally and has received numerous awards and recognitions among which are:  Nominee Schelling Architecture Prize 2012, Germany / Nominee Iakov Chernikhov International Prize for Young Architects 2012, Russia / “Taller Particular”, Honorable Mention, 6th International Architecture Festival in Barcelona EME3 - Spain, 2011 / Al Borde, architectural merit "Francisco Eduardo Tresguerras ", the highest honor awarded by the College of Architects of Celaya, Mexico, 2010 / “Nueva Esperanza” School, Official Selection Works, the highest honor awarded by the VII BIAU 2010, Medellin - Colombia, 2010 / House Between Walls , 20 +10 + X Architecture Award, World Architecture Community, Third Cycle 2009 / Pentimento House (Jose Maria Sáez and David Barragán), Award for Best Young Architect, VI BIAU 2008, Lisbon, Portugal, 2008 and the National Architectural Design Award, XV BAQ 2006, Quito - Ecuador, 2006 / “Compartiendo cielo y tierra”, People Cityscape, David Barragan, Gold Medal - Final Year Project, XV BAQ 2006, Quito - Ecuador, 2006.

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Published on: February 24, 2025
Cite: "Ancestral practices into contemporary times. Community library Yuyarina Pacha by Al Borde" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/ancestral-practices-contemporary-times-community-library-yuyarina-pacha-al-borde> ISSN 1139-6415
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