Church(ita)

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

CHURCH(ITA)

Supersudaka

ARCHITECTS
Supersudaka

YEAR
2009

AREA
200.0 m2

CATEGORY
Churches

LOCATION
Talca, Chile

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

Text description provided by architect.

Next to one of the city of Talca’s harshest ghettos –Villa Las Americas- this Church in Villa la Paz serves not only as a place for religious cult, but it also embraces a social agenda in terms of a community program.

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

Because of the budget being extremely low only the Chapel could be built. Consequently its configuration is crucial to maintain and promote the social complementary program such as communal meeting rooms and small library.

As the neighborhood originates from an informal settlement, the site geometry results from an addition of irregular parts, like a fractal sequence. This reigning geometry is used to insert the small chapel by the torsion of a regular cubic volume avoiding front and rear facades hierarchies.

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

From this arrangement the actual and upcoming social program in the perimeter is allowed and integrated in a centrifugal courtyard display.

As an optimistic gesture the classical cross plan of a church becomes a star inspired chapel: light in darkness.

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

The project’s steel and layered panel -very economical- construction system is triangulated to optimize the structure to hover the interior space without columns but also permitting a 15m long opening to the interior courtyard for highly attended festivities such as Christmas.

The technical and spatial qualities are more closer to a covered plaza than an enclosed building.

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

Since the passing neighbors constantly throw stones, a ceramic-mosaic finish by visual artist Simon Fuentes acts as an easy to repair, cheap, already broken wrapping, which also follows a millenary religious technique. That is Church(ita).


Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka


Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka


Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka

Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka
Church(ita)
Courtesy of Supersudaka