TENERIFE SCHOOL OF SCENIC ARTS BY GPY ARQUITECTOS


GPY Arquitectos

This Centre of the Dramatic Arts presents itself to the city as a platform, as an urban stage with the city and landscape as backdrop. In the area there is an exceptional view of the city, the mountains (Macizo de Anaga) and the Sea.

GPY Arquitectos

In order to take full advantage of the landscape potential, the considerable difference in height between the terrain and the adjacent street is used to make the height of the roof correspond with the slope of the street, arranging the uses of the programme below this level.

GPY Arquitectos

The interior roofed patio, generated by a three-dimensional folding of the wooden surface of the roof, is conceived as a scenic box that opens up towards the city and affirms itself as the building’s spatial reference point, a place for relationships and interchange.

GPY Arquitectos

Defined as an inclined surface, the patio functions at the same time as an open-air auditorium and as  the backbone for the pedestrian routes throughout the building, comprising a system of ramps that relate the different scenic spaces of the building via an oblique geometry.

GPY Arquitectos

The whole building can be transformed into a space for performances, a public  open theatre with the audience watching from the ramps, the platforms, the landings, transformed into both actors and spectators at the same time.

GPY Arquitectos

Featuring a striking, zigzagging system of ramps that relate the different scenic spaces of the building, the multi-storey building has been developed with the intention of providing a platform, an urban stage with the city and landscape as backdrop, where ‘the action determines the space of representation.

GPY Arquitectos

“We look for local materials, a low technical complexity of the project and also low maintenance costs. In the case of concrete, the structural elements function at the same time as the finishings.

GPY Arquitectos

We also consider light as a building material – the light that fills the interior empty spaces. The fundamental quality of the elements delimiting the spaces is their transparency or reflectivity – in other words, their behaviour in the presence of light.”

GPY Arquitectos
GPY Arquitectos 

GPY Arquitectos
GPY Arquitectos 
Location: El Ramonal, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, Spain 
Architect: gpy arquitectos 
Collaboration: Félix Perera Pérez,Gustavo García Báez, Constanze Sixt, Architects 
Structural Engineering: Martínez Segovia, Fernández, Pallas y Asociados 
Technical Architect: Luis Darías Martín 
Technical Industrial Engineer: José Miguel Navarro 
Contract: Necso Entrecanales Cubiertas, S.A. 

Constructed Surface: 3.360 m2 
Year: 2011 
Client: Tenerife Insular Council + Canary Islands Government 
Photographs: Teresa Arozena, Miguel de Guzmán, Roland Halbe,  Efraín Pintos, Joaquín Ponce de León

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