LAMA | Pezo Von Ellrichshausen

Santa Lucia Alto, Yungay / Chile / 2023

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11 Love 2,325 Visits Published

The solitary figure works as a landmark and a lookout (and look-in) place. With a vertical succession of rooms, it was built to look at the Andes Mountains, hidden amongst old native trees. Its format is that of a slender volume formed by two stacked towers, each half the total height. The lower one has an eave that duplicates the size of its roof, the upper one has a terrace that duplicates the footprint of its floor. Floor and roof become a horizontal plate that sits halfway the elevation, a thin plane cantilevered in every cardinal direction, has a difficult function: it holds a shallow pond of rain water, thus, it turns the slab both into a mirror that reflects the upper section of the tower, the sky and the surrounding trees, and also into a fictional glass, a transparency, that suggests the presence of the lower tower. Even more difficult than that, like a permanent cloud, the plate casts a deep solid shadow over the lower tower, eventually with rain falling all around by the overflow of the little pond. Ironically, inside the tower, its lookout function is reversed. Instead of framing the sublime panorama, tempering its imposing presence, the access to the suspended platform follows a spiral staircase that pivots around a continuous outdoor mural of vines, both living and painted, depicting a selection of thirty native flowers as if connected into the same tree. After the platform, a feeble wood ladder allows access to a black room with four peepholes, a kind of devious camera obscura, which then leads to an open, overexposed rooftop with a fire pit that, at the right distance, might turn the entire tower into an outdated chimney.


Client: Fundacion Artificial
Author: Pezo von Ellrichshausen (Mauricio Pezo & Sofia von Ellrichshausen)
Collaborators: Emilie Kjaer, Maria Arnold, Francesco Caminati, Beatrice Pedrotti, Theo Cozzi, Olga Arzul
Structure: Sergio Contreras
Construction: Constructora Natural
Material: Reinforced concrete
Surface: 35 m2
Date: 2020-2023
Photography: © Pezo von Ellrichshausen


[ES]
Esta solitaria figura funciona como señal y como mirador del paisaje (tanto interior como exterior). Con una secuencia vertical de habitaciones, fue construida para mirar la Cordillera de los Andes, escondida detrás del bosque nativo. Su formato es el de una esbelto volumen, formado a su vez por dos torres: la inferior con un alero que duplica su cubierta, la superior con una terraza que duplica su planta. Piso y techo son una losa horizontal proyectada a la mitad de la elevación -un delgado plano en voladizo que se extiende hacia los cuatro puntos cardinales- tiene la difícil función de contener un estanque poco profundo de agua de lluvia. Así, esta losa se convierte en un espejo que refleja el tramo superior de la torre, el cielo y los árboles de alrededor; pero también se transfigura en un cristal ficticio, en una transparencia, que sugiere la presencia de la torre inferior. Y aún más difícil: a modo de nube permanente, la losa arroja una sombra densa y compacta sobre la torre inferior, e incluso, en ocasiones, la lluvia cae por todo el perímetro debido al desborde del pequeño estanque. Paradójicamente, la función de mirador se revierte dentro de la torre. En vez de enmarcar el panorama sublime, acaso templando una presencia imponente, el acceso a la plataforma suspendida ocurre mediante una escalera helicoidal que gira alrededor de un mural continuo de enredaderas, tanto vivas como pintadas, que describen una selección de treinta flores nativas interconectadas en un mismo árbol.  Después de la plataforma, una enclenque escala de madera deja subir a una habitación negra y con cuatro mirillas, una suerte de intrincada camera obscura, que a su vez sirve de paso a una cubierta abierta, sobreexpuesta, y con un fogón que, a la distancia adecuada, podría convertir toda la torre en una anticuada chimenea.

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    The solitary figure works as a landmark and a lookout (and look-in) place. With a vertical succession of rooms, it was built to look at the Andes Mountains, hidden amongst old native trees. Its format is that of a slender volume formed by two stacked towers, each half the total height. The lower one has an eave that duplicates the size of its roof, the upper one has a terrace that duplicates the footprint of its floor. Floor and roof become a horizontal plate that sits halfway the elevation, a...

    Project details
    • Year 2023
    • Work finished in 2023
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Pavilions
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    Lovers 11 users