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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
Comoco Arquitectos (Luìs Miguel Correia, Nelson Mota, Susana Constantino) added a cafeteria, a wooden gazebo, a set of repaved pathways and a new castle entrance on the hill of Pombal's Castle.
The architects managed to create a complex with a delicate balance between nature and built-up.
Throughout the last decades, the Castle and its surrounding
area have been doomed to seclusion from the core of the city at their
feet. For the ordinary city user, the Castle was only a background for
the everyday life. The project for
the reorganization of Pombal Castle’s hill was launched by the city’s
municipality with the goal of promoting the re-centralization of that
area.
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
The basis of the design strategy was thus an attempt to deliver an
approach were the new designed elements should be clearly defined
against the background of both the natural and the built pre-existing
elements, without challenging the latters’ character, tough. To achieve
this goal, the project defined three areas, each of which with a
different conceptual approach.
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
In the first area, the south and west slopes of the hill, the approach
was focused on the idea of flow. The idea was developed creating
and highlighting connections between the urban areas at the bottom of
the Castle’s hill, pathways along the slopes and gazebos to provide
shelter and foster diverse experiences in the contact with the
landscape. The materials used were prominently plastered walls, stone
and grit pavements, and wooden structures.
In the second area, the surroundings of the cemetery, the approach was
concerned with the idea of topological infrastructure. Both the parking
area and the adjacent facilities were designed as topographical
elements, concrete walls supporting the transition between sharp
differences of levels.
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
Finally, the third area, surrounding the walled precinct, aimed at
enhancing the presence of the Castle as the area’s main reference.
Hence, the western access to the 12th century Castle was redesigned,
including the platform at its bottom. The surrounding area of 16th
century Santa Maria’s Church was also redesigned to provide a public
space for
performances and other cultural activities. The material that is
thoroughly used in this area is a local limestone, the same originally
used in the main landmarks: the Castle and the Church’s ruins.
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
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© Fernando Guerra / FG+SG |
The new cafeteria works as a connector between the three areas and as an attraction for visitors. To highlight its singular role in the overall intervention, the
cafeteria was built using a metallic structure and finished with cor-ten
steel panels cladding both on its façades and roofs. This solution
embodies the design’s strategy of affirming the new against the
pre-existing and preserving, however, the identity of the place.
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