Parque Tecnológico IMPIVA

Hardo Braun, Dieter Grömling

Description

The project initiated by local Valencia government strives to provide an attractive location for technologically innovative enterprises mainly of the locally important ceramic industry. To solve the task, the design concept had to react to a heterogeneous and varied programme: Laboratories, workshops, experimental hall buildings, offices, sales areas, and meeting rooms had to be arranged in flexible units and equipped with specific mechanical services. The main challenge of the project was handling the complex functional programme and also the great architectural freedom since the site almost completely lacked any relevant urban and spatial context. The result is a structurally and formally unusual and exciting building. It is located at the crossing of two major roads – the palatial boulevard leading to the port and the ring road to Castellón. A number of building volumes are arranged parallel and shifted successively, poignantly interpreting the urban context and highlighting the street corner.

The architectural solution is unique in separating the required areas from each other and grouping them in a number of individual buildings. The resulting pattern is reminiscent of commercial barcodes. Construction, proportions, and materials used are governed by this basic concept. The minimal distances between the volumes also order the inside, by enabling natural lighting and strengthening the individuality of each volume by exposing its corners.

The exterior appearance is to reflect the technology-orientated, innovative energies of the young enterprises. Particular façade materials were allocated to particular interior functions: aluminium for the laboratories, experimental hall buildings, and workshops; chessboard-like timber cladding for the office spaces at the gable ends. This use of materials is also followed through on the interior: maple veneered panels dominate the representative rooms; exposed sandlime brick is used for the industrial areas. The holistic overall appearance of the complex with its individual character is supported by the simplified details of the structure and interior fit-out.

Drawings

This browser does not support PDFs.Site plan

This browser does not support PDFs.Schematic sketch of building

This browser does not support PDFs.Ground floor

Photos

Front panorama of the technology park with the stepped arrangement of the cubes

Interior with reception and transition to the adjacent part of the complex


Originally published in: Hardo Braun, Dieter Grömling, Research and Technology Buildings: A Design Manual, Birkhäuser, 2005.

Building Type Research & Technology Buildings

Morphological Type Clustered Low-Rise/Mat, Slab/Super-Block

Urban Context Industrial Area/Business Park, Urban Block Structure

Architect Carlos Bento, Carlos Ferrater, Jaime Sanahuja

Year 1993-1995

Location Castellón

Country Spain

Geometric Organization Linear

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Column-and-Slab

Access Type Comb/Grid Systems

Layout Deep Linear Plan, Interconnected Ensemble, Linear Plan

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Map Link to Map