French Institute of Andean Studies

French Institute of Andean Studies 

Roman Bauer Arquitectos + ESARQUITECTURA Atelier

French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio

CLIENTS
Instituto Francés De Estudios Andinos.

LEAD ARCHITECTS
José Bauer, Augusto Román, Enrique Santillana

ENGINEERING
Jorge Avendaño

DESIGN TEAM
Ailed Tejada, Jimena De La Jara, Karen Canaza, Marcos Rafael

WOOD CONSULTANT
Luis Takahashi

ADOBE AND QUINCHA CONSULTANT
Urbano Tejada

ACOUSTINCS
Carlos Jiménez

CLIMATE CONSULTANT
Agustín Adarve

CONSTRUCTION
Silvia Onnis, Gabriel Gómez.

CONTRACTOR
Chávez Constructores

SITE SUPERVISION
Juan Carlos Balbuena

AREA
640 M²

YEAR
2022

LOCATION
Barranco, Peru

CATEGORY
Institute

French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano

Two buildings make up the new headquarters of IFEA: a monumental house, preserved through structural reinforcement, where administrative offices, the bookstore, and the cafeteria are located; and a new building, on a small rear plot, which houses the library on the first floor and research offices on the second level.

An existing patio garden functions as a threshold between them, extending the relationship with the street through a lateral access gallery.

French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano

This old patio garden, located in the center of the plot and where a large palm tree is preserved, is established as the main public meeting space from which access is gained to the bookstore, cafeteria, and library.

The library on the first level of the new building has a double-height reading room and zenithal lighting, designed as a flexible space using sliding panels that allow it to be transformed into an academic events room. Its valuable collection of over 80,000 volumes is contained in compact shelves within a protective concrete case.

French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano

On top of this base, an opaque quincha volume emerges, containing scientific research rooms on the second floor, naturally illuminated and ventilated by zenithal skylights, characteristic devices of traditional buildings in Lima, designed in this case to adapt to prevailing winds and not to be perceived from the street, thus preserving the presence of the heritage house.

The structuring of the upper part is achieved with wooden frames of the quincha panels, which support the roof, made of fixed plates on double beams of laminated wood and post-tensioned with steel cables, to cover important spans and to achieve more efficient and rational use of wood.

French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio

The improved quincha is composed of intertwined caña brava covered in mud, reusing the soil from excavations and the dismantled adobes from the same place, and lightened with straw to reduce its weight. This gives it mixed properties of insulation and thermal inertia.

The concrete was poured into formwork panels made of recovered wooden slats from pre-existing buildings on the site, leaving their mark to signify their tectonics and memory.

French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano

The project stands out for the use of improved traditional construction techniques, which contribute to and provide continuity not only to the built heritage in the monumental area of Barranco, Lima but also to the knowledge and construction trades that are in danger of extinction despite being very relevant to the climate and seismicity of the Peruvian coast.

The building has been carried out under rigorous criteria of environmental sustainability through the use of materials such as caña, mud, stone, and wood, with very low environmental impact, in addition to the reuse of spaces and materials, as well as an understanding of the solar path and winds of the place to use passive mechanisms of climatization.

French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano

The project was awarded the National Hexagon Steel Award at the XIX Biennial of Peruvian Architecture 2022, as well as being a finalist at the Quito Biennial 2022 and for the Oscar Niemeyer Award 2022.


French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio


French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano
French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© JAG studio
French Institute of Andean Studies
© Juan Solano


French Institute of Andean Studies
First floor plan
French Institute of Andean Studies
Second floor plan


French Institute of Andean Studies
Section
French Institute of Andean Studies
Section

French Institute of Andean Studies
Section - constructive detail
French Institute of Andean Studies
Section - constructive detail


French Institute of Andean Studies
Diagram
French Institute of Andean Studies
Diagram