Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Facade, Stairs, HandrailSiamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Facade, SteelSiamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Image 4 of 15Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - BeamSiamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - More Images+ 10

Santiago, Chile
  • Architects: Alejandro Aravena: Alejandro Aravena, Charles Murray, Alfonso Montero, Ricardo Torrejon
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  5000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2003
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Cristobal Palma

Text description provided by the architects. We were asked to build a glass tower to host everything that had to do with computers in the university.

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Forest
© Cristobal Palma

The university asked us to question the type of architecture required for teaching now that everything depends on digital technology. Should architecture change now that we have computers? Does the notion of room (be it for work or for attend a class) still make sense? Our answer was, of course, Yes and No.

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Image 15 of 15
Ground Floor Plan

Yes because the paradigm for working spaces has been reversed; if until now a good room, was the one that had a good natural light (library, classroom, etc), now that we work on screens, a good space is the one that has achieved a good half-light (to avoid uncomfortable reflections). This fact led us to explore a relatively hermetic volume, with very controlled perforations towards the outside.

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Image 4 of 15
© Cristobal Palma

But on the other hand, we were not that optimistic regarding computers and their influence in education, or the transmission of knowledge; in the end nothing will defeat a good conversation of two persons (be it between a professor and a student, or between students) under a good shadow, drinking a nice cup of coffee or having a casual conversation in a corridor. In a way, formal education is taken care by building codes: light, acoustics, ventilation, etc. but nobody takes care of informal education and there we saw a design opportunity. So, instead of moving forward thinking about the next step in education, we thought we had to move back as much as possible, to more archaic and primitive ways of being.

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Facade, Steel
© Cristobal Palma
Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Image 13 of 15
Sections
Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Facade, Column
© Cristobal Palma

Regarding the glass, the problem was that building a glass tower in Santiago, means automatically to take care of the greenhouse effect. We had no money for a curtain-wall, able to solve all the issues in one single skin (double, effective and colored glass). Even if we had the money, the amount of energy that has to be spent afterwards for air conditioning is obscene. Finally we did not like mirror glass for the façade, because it is vulgar. So instead of thinking about a skin capable of doing all the job (protection against dust, rain, smog, weathering and greenhouse effect) which costs around US$ 120 x sqm, we thought that it would be cheaper to do several skins, each of them doing 1 thing at a time. So we designed an outer single glass skin, very bad in energetic terms, but very good against weathering. Then an internal building made out of fiber-cement, bad against weathering but energetic wise. In between them: air. All we had to do, was to avoid the greenhouse effect generated after the sun trespassing the glass, to reach the second building inside. So we allowed the space in between the two buildings to perform as a perimeter chimney, letting the hot air to leave the system ascending by convection to a void in the top. A constant and natural vertical wind, helped by the Venturi effect created by the waists will eliminate the greenhouse effect. The sum of the two buildings, because they were more specific in their performances, was 30% cheaper. We also expect to spend much less energy during its useful life.

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Facade, Stairs, Handrail
© Cristobal Palma

Finally, there was the problem of trying to have a tower, because we had just 5.000 sqm to achieve it. Didn't matter how much we reduce the surface of each floor, the resulting figure was pretty chubby; it was a high building, but it didn't look like a tower. So the only solution we thought of, was to cut the volume in two from the 7th floor up. For each of the resulting parts we used almost width-less aluminium pieces of slight different colors. So if seen from the front, the building has a unique bi-chepalus volume, but seen as a foreshortened figure, the color difference could show a couple of really vertical figures, that happened to share great part of their bodies, as if they were Siamese criatures.

Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena - Facade
© Cristobal Palma

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Project location

Address:Camino Privado, Macul, Región Metropolitana, Chile

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Siamese Towers / Alejandro Aravena" 25 May 2008. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1277/siamese-towers-alejandro-aravena> ISSN 0719-8884

© Cristobal Palma

智利暹罗塔 / 亚力杭德罗·阿拉维纳

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