Architecture studio Al Borde designed a project at Al Qasimiya School, the venue for the Sharjah Architecture Triennial, whose demand determined its final duration. The project was marked by the intention to make the school an open space, connected to the rest of the city and its community, while exploring new ways of occupying and creating public space.

This project, or threshold, constructed from natural materials available in the area, such as wooden poles, results in a raw and tactile work that establishes an intimate and direct dialogue with the site. It welcomes for visitors and invites them to experiment and test the use of the new space.

For the Sharjah Architecture Triennial, Al Borde created an attractive space for residents and workers, inviting exploration and community gatherings while providing a shaded space using palm mats and repurposed wooden poles. This resulted in a useful, efficient, and responsible space transformation.

This project offered the flexibility to be assembled and disassembled in different locations, and it was only when the materials that comprise it degraded that it came to a close in harmony with nature. During this time, the structure created a threshold for the community, inviting reflection on the development of architectural materiality and local identity.

Raw Threshold by Al Borde. Photograph by Danko Stjepanovic.

Raw Threshold by Al Borde. Photograph by Ahmed Osama.

Project description by Al Borde

Between the Available and the Biodegradable
In a context where everything is within reach, where anything is possible to acquire from anywhere, and the capitalist development approach has eroded the local identity to the extent of destroying historic neighborhoods, a fundamental question arises: What does it mean to be local?

The Al Qasimiyah school has relinquished its role as a primary school and transformed into one of the venues for the SAT (Sharjah Architecture Triennial). In this shift of purpose, the school evolves from a confined space within a perimeter wall, with a mission to care for children, to aspiring to become an open space that connects with its surroundings and the city. This newfound openness generates fresh ways of occupying the area. The new pedestrian accesses from the North and West converge onto a platform, providing an opportunity to highlight this meeting point and establish a welcoming threshold.

Umbral crudo por Al Borde. Fotografía por Ahmed Osama. --- Raw Threshold by Al Borde. Photograph by Ahmed Osama.
Raw Threshold by Al Borde. Photograph by Danko Stjepanovic.

This threshold is defined by a shadow that creates the conditions for inhabiting the exterior. It requires a structure that is possible to build with any available material. However, in a context; where "everything" is "available," this concept becomes blurry. Considering the economy of effort draws a path to pursue maximum efficiency in transforming raw materials into architectural elements, thus minimizing the energy used in production, processing, and transportation of materials.

The Sharjah Electricity, Water, and Gas Authority (SEWA) has initiated a process of replacing wooden poles with metal ones, which has resulted in a hundred preserved wooden poles stored in their depot. The best ones are selected, damaged ends cut off, and a package of logs of various sizes is obtained, tall enough to assemble a structure from which the shadow suspends.

Raw Threshold by Al Borde. Photograph by Danko Stjepanovic.
Raw Threshold by Al Borde. Photograph by Danko Stjepanovic.

The shade is created using palm tree mats, a material available in the area. It used in various applications, from the floors of houses to the ceilings of the souks, and even in enclosures. These mats can be easily acquired in any bazaar, offering a variety of types, sizes, shapes, and textures.

This design approach results in a raw and tactile work; crafted with natural materials that allow us to establish an intimate and direct discourse with the place, grounding it on site. The threshold will serve to welcome visitors and, simultaneously, become a way to experience and test the use of this new space, drawing the attention of those who reside and work nearby; inviting them to cross its boundaries.

The project will endure as long as the space requires, providing the flexibility to be assembled and disassembled in other locations. When the time comes to conclude its use, the poles can return to the depot, awaiting a new purpose, while the mats' versatility may easily find another use. There will come a day when these materials naturally degrade, and the cycle of life will close harmoniously with nature.

More information

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Architects
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Exhibition
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Sharjah Architecture Triennial - The Beauty of the Impermanence.

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Curator
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Collaborators
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Wood Poles.- SEWA (Sharjah Electricity, Water and Gas Authority).

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Prodution
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Equipo SAT.

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Area
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340.00 sqm.

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Dates
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Design - 2022-2023.
Construction - 2023.

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Location
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Sharjah, United Arab Emirates.

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Photography
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Danko Stjepanovic, Ieva Saudargaite, Ahmed Osama, Shahbaz Ahmed, Al Borde. Courtesy of Sharjah Architecture Triennial.

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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: April 19, 2025
Cite: "Open spaces, thresholds, and biodegradable materials. Raw Threshold by Al Borde" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/open-spaces-thresholds-and-biodegradable-materials-raw-threshold-al-borde> ISSN 1139-6415
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