This pavilion is not only ephemeral; when San Sebastián stop being European Capital of Culture this will descompose itself into 278 "Bow Tie" banks, which will be distributed by the city as new street furniture.
A collaboration between  Zuloark, Alberto Rey and Tipi Studio is responsible for this great pavilion, the winner for the information center design for the European cultural capital city of San Sebastian [DSS2016]. A work that comes from the traditional project process' investment, being its life and final shape the main determinant of itself. Recycling and city construction rised to another level.
 

Project description by Zuloark

Design for 2017.


Our proposal doesn’t start from architecture.
Our proposal doesn’t start with the design of an ephemeral pavilion.
Our proposal is not even a structure that can be reused.
Our proposal intends to be an exercise of urbanism that creates a space for thinking and producing the city of tomorrow.


We have tried to work backwards, from the future to the present, to see how an information pavilion could mean something for San Sebastian, the European capital of culture. We designed a process of transformation of the city and explored ways in which this challenge could become a pavilion. Our strategy is to intervene in San Sebastian’s public space by designing a pavilion that can be constructed as an assembled chrysalis containing the result of the future of the city.

We propose a new line of street furniture for San Sebastian that can be distributed in the streets and squares from January 2017, but until then it will remain under the form of an assembled information pavilion.

The pavilion is an assembly of 278 "bow tie" benches with a metal frame and wooden seats which can be combined in many ways. All seats face inwards and become a continuous wooden folding plane. The metal legs of the benches form the three dimensional structure and support for the waterproof tent fabric.

We propose that the cultural event “DSS2016“ can become a propulsor to literally transform the city, and through this open strategy allow a change that can be observed once the event is over. San Sebastian won't be the same again. In 2017 all the particles of the pavilion will be transformed into urban furniture and compose a landscape of the scattered pavilion.

Project precepts 

>Amplify affection communities.
A pavilion can affect a whole city.
The strategy to design a pavilion made with benches is a response to an ecologic matter, not only in terms of reusing material and optimizing processes but also from the standpoint that architecture becomes more sustainable if more agents can be affected by it in any way. Our desire is that the pavilion makes it possible for many to transform their daily lives through it. Even if you as a San Sebastian citizen that hasn’t used the services provided by the pavilion nor has participated in any of the activities the cultural capital offers which are informed in the pavilion, its construction will be able to offer you service some day in the shape of furniture.

>Participatory process of dismantling.
Dismantling the DSS2016 pavilion cannot be done in a conventional way. The bench dismantling system, the share-out process and the way its next destination is decided requires a plan. The plan is to gather and reach agreements with local agents, PTAs, technicians and public administration in order to decide which spaces or institutions are the ones to receive what are today the walls, floors and roof of the pavilion.

>Urban camouflage.
The settlement where the pavilion is located is very special. Probably the best and most representative place in the city, it is the neuralgic centre of a society strongly rooted in the sea. The pavilion does not camouflage its presence, it camouflages its shape, its size and its direction. This aesthetic and conceptual gesture comes to life as dazzle camouflage, developed by the British Admiralty to mislead the terrible German U-boots. The pavilions dazzle camouflage is painted with  the most representative colours of the Gipuzkoan capital, the colours of Txuri-Urdin (white and blue).

>Shared authorship.
The same way a movie is the result of the effort of many individuals and collectives which are more or less visible and in each case can be nominated for an Oscar and their effort and work can be acknowledged in that way, architecture must show the reality of its processes and acknowledge in an explicit way the summatory of collaborative work that every building requires, no matter how modest the building is.

So in order to make the shared authorship visible, inside the pavilion we can find a bow tie bench showing the credits of each and every member involved indispensably in the construction of the DSS2016 pavilion.

Read more
Read less

More information

Label
Authors
Text
Zuloark + Alberto Rey + Tipi Studio
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Project team
Text
Technical architect.- Asier Tellería.
Production coordinators.- Viuda de Ramírez: Uxue Peña, Camelia Ciruelos, Manuel Muñoz, Patxi Camón, Juan Carlos Gómez y Germán Díaz.
Structural analysis.- Antonio Fernández Caro.
Climatization.- Climatizacion tec: Iñigo Arretxe, Juantxo Figuerido, Mikel Arrillaga, Gonzalo Aldanondo .
Electricity.- Elektra: Jose Martin Ezkerra, Jose Calvo, Daniel, Elias Arruebarrena
Foundation, aids and support.- Campezo: Elena Martin, Teoforo Macias, Tomas Reyes, Javier Gago, Juan Manuel Gago, Marcio Gomes, Vicente Estevez, Alex Fernandez, Jose Mari Villar.
Locksmiths support.- Talleres Martutene: Imanol Jareño, Francisco Javier Delgado, Iñaki Diez, Moises Bermejo.
Security and Health.- BPG coordinadores: David Pedrosa y Jorge Goldaracena.
Project's Support.- Estudio Lekuona: Jabier Lekuona, Julen Lekuona, Maite Lekuona y María Jauregui.
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Client
Text
DSS2016.
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Venue
Text
San Sebastián, Spain.
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Area
Text
88+36 sqm
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.
Label
Year
Text
2016
+ + copy Created with Sketch.
- + copy Created with Sketch.

Zuloark is an Open Office of Architecture and Urbanism founded in 2001. Since then, the office has worked on liquid and collaborative professional models, building shared responsibility environments in which to share the authorship of projects with as many agents as possible. It currently has an open office in Madrid, Berlin, Barcelona, ​​Mexico City and Brussels.

Zuloark's activity, working on different platforms such as El Campo de Cebada or Inteligencias Colectivas, has been internationally recognized with different awards, Golden Nica 2013, XII Spanish Architecture and Urbanism Biennial Award, 2012 Ibero-American Architecture and Urbanism Biennial Award, Urbanism Award at the IV Arquia Próxima Awards, First Arquia Próxima 2012 Award and UN Best Practice at the 2014 Dubai International Award.

His work has been shown in different cultural institutions around the world, such as the MoMA in NewYork, the Akademie Der Kunste in Berlin, the Lisbon Architecture Triennial or in Matadero Madrid.

Read more
Published on: September 30, 2016
Cite: "YESTERDAY YOU SAID TOMORROW, an ephemeral pavilion for DSS2016" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/yesterday-you-said-tomorrow-ephemeral-pavilion-dss2016> ISSN 1139-6415
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...
Loading content ...