Architecture practice David Closes was commissioned to design the new entrances to the former Jesuit college in Manresa, the most populated city in Bages, Barcelona, Spain, which would be transformed into the spaces that house the Baroque Museum of Catalonia and the History Museum of the City of Manresa.

The project for the new entrances to the building proposes a set of volumes that include both the new spaces used as halls and the new main entrances to the museum's exhibition floors. The project, in short, aims to reinterpret both the relationship of the place with the building itself, reestablishing links with the past of the Jesuit complex and with the city.
The New entrance façade to the Baroque Museum of Catalonia designed by the David Closes studio is an intervention that consists of the implementation of new volumes placed in front of the old partition of the church in a way that allows generating perspectives to the most important elements of the original state of the building.

The intervention proposes a new way of understanding both the building and its urban environment. The new entrances to the museum generate a route that allows you to admire the views of the key elements of the old school, views of the adjacent urban spaces and views of the significant elements of the city's urban and landscape heritage.
 


New entrance façade of the Baroque Museum of Catalonia by David Closes. Photograph by Adrià Goula

Description of project by David Closes.

Sometimes surprising coincidences might occur. Between 2003 and 2011 we conducted an architectural intervention on Sant Francesc Convent, in Santpedor, to transform it into an auditorium. The project was carried out on a former convent built in the 18th century where only the church was remaining; the conventual wings and cloister had disappeared. Five years later, located in Manresa, we were commissioned to develop an inverse assignment from the previous one: an intervention on the Old Saint Ignatius College, a former religious complex based on a convent structure whose baroque church was demolished; only the wings of the old Jesuit college placed around a cloister remained. In both cases, the architectonical intervention was done on buildings amputated of one of its two essential elements; in the present project, the old baroque church.

The construction of the new accesses to the old Jesuit college is framed in the global renovation project of the entire built complex, which should rationalize, refresh, and rethink the spaces of the preexisting museum. The planned interventions should allow the building to host the Baroque Museum of Catalonia and Manresa’s City History Museum.

The project on the new accesses to the building proposes a set of volumes which include both the new spaces destined for the hall and the main new accesses to the exhibition floors of the museum. The new volumes, placed in front of the old partitioning wall of the church, are arranged in a way that allows the conformation of the new façade of the building but at the same time grants the sights to the most important footprints of the old church that remains on the partitioning wall.


New entrance façade of the Baroque Museum of Catalonia by David Closes. Photograph by Adrià Goula

The intervention in the new accesses of the building pretends to be more than just a solution for the west façade of the old Jesuit college: the intervention proposes a new way of grasping both the building and its urban surroundings. The new accesses of the museum create a pathway which allows one to admire the sights of the key elements of the old college (the cloister, the barrel vaults or the footprints onto the partitioning wall), sights over the adjacent urban spaces (Sant Ignasi’s Square and the urban orography of an old creek) and, finally, sights to the significant elements of the urban and landscape heritage of the city (the gothic basilica of La Seu, the defence tower of Santa Caterina or the mountain of Montserrat). The path created by the new accesses culminates, at its highest point, in a bleacher that overlooks the urban landscape.

The project, in short, aims to re-mean both the site of the intervention and the building itself by re-establishing links with the past of the Jesuit complex and with the city.

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Architects
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Collaborators
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David Jiménez (construction engineer), Toni Vila (industrial engineer), Bernuz-Fernàndez arquitectes (structures consultants), Best Costales-Jaen (structures consultants), Ramon Nieto (architect), Sònia Cantacorps (architect), Pere Foradada (construction engineer), Maria Vilaseca (draftswoman), Anna Vilaplana (draftswoman).
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Client
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Manresa City Council.
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Builder
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Artífex Infraestructuras SL.
Constructora D’Aro SA.
Construcciones Fertres SL.
Constructora del Cardoner SA.
UTE Natur System SL i Solvetia SL.
Rècop Restauracions Arquitectòniques SL.
Constructora de Calaf SAU.
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Area
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2,660 sqm.
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Dates
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Project.- 2015-2022.
Execution.- 2016-2022.
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Location
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Plaça de Sant Ignasi, 14. 08241 - Manresa, Barcelona, Spain.
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Budget
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€ 6,624,712.
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Photography
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David Closes is an architect from the Barcelona Higher Technical School of Architecture (ETSAB) born in 1967 in Catalonia. He has worked mainly on urban scale projects, on public space projects and on territorial and landscape proposals belonging to various public institutions. From 2004 to 2011 he has been Director of the Urban Planning Area of the Projects Department of the Manresa City Council.
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Published on: March 16, 2024
Cite: "Pre-selected perspectives. New entrance façade of the Baroque Museum of Catalonia by David Closes" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/pre-selected-perspectives-new-entrance-facade-baroque-museum-catalonia-david-closes> ISSN 1139-6415
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