Godai Pavilion

Godai Pavilion

Baldó Arquitectura

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

TECHNICAL ARCHITECTS
David González Jorrin

MANUFACTURERS
Hoppe, JUNG, Technal, MOSO, ICONICO, Industrias ROGO SL, OBBO, Porcelanosa Grupo, SIMONSWERK North America, Thermochip

WOOD
Ferrao 1830 wood solutions

LIGHT SWITCH
LS 990

STRUCTURES
Pentia

CONSTRUCTION
Asis Projects Servicios Integrales SL

LEAD ARCHITECTS
José Baldó de Andrés, José Baldó Sierra

PHOTOGRAPHS
Luis Asín

AREA
169 m²

YEAR
2023

LOCATION
Spain

CATEGORY
Mixed Use Architecture, Gymnasium

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

Text description provided by architect.

THE SITE

The project was born as an architectural response to the construction of a pavilion for guests attached to the pool of an existing home in the rural environment of Cantabria.

The land on which it sits extends with a slight downward slope towards the north, with the house, the pool, and the Pavilion located in the southern area of the plot.

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín
Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

The local climate takes on a fundamental value, where strong winds, rain, and summer sun become protagonists.

THE OBJECTIVE

The pavilion aims to be a “pool house” building, creating a dialogue between different architectures, forming a space, with the pool as a central element and a link between the existing home and the new pavilion, where natural materials take on special relevance.

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín
Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

THE PROPOSAL

In this context, the “GODAI” pavilion is designed, a term by which the so-called “five elements” are known in Japan: earth, water, fire, wind, and emptiness.

A large roof unifies the different uses, the rooms dialogue with nature through the transparency of the facades, and the interior ceilings are worked like “origami”, separating themselves from the exterior envelope and personalizing the space they make up.

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín
Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

Bamboo becomes the protagonist of the work, seeking the “walnut effect”, through an outer skin of black bamboo, dark and robust, and an interior of natural bamboo, bright and warm.

The exterior façade degrades its opacity, going from total opacity to transparency.

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín
Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

A second skin of bamboo slats emphasizes this aspect through a rhythm in the separation between them that follows the Fibonacci sequence.

The interior coverings are also made of bamboo, both on the walls, floors, and ceilings, in honor of the “washitsu”, or traditional Japanese style rooms. The roofs adapt by folding and formally detaching themselves from the outer shell.

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín
Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín

SUSTAINABILITY 

The pavilion proposes highly efficient passive systems such as the large roof, solar and rain protection, and the system of vertical slats that allow privacy, cross ventilation, and lighting without solar incidence.

But it is the materials used that really give it prominence, natural insulation such as cork and mineral rock wool, interior partitions made of local pine wood and recycled OSB boards, OSB roof sandwich panels with a core of recycled wood fibers, and bamboo, as the protagonist of the construction, being used in floors, walls and ceilings, both interior and exterior.

Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín


Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín
Godai Pavilion
© Luis Asín


Godai Pavilion
Plan
Godai Pavilion
Plans
Godai Pavilion
Plans
Godai Pavilion
Plan - Site


Godai Pavilion
Sections


Godai Pavilion
Elevations