Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray

Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior PhotographyGuayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, GardenGuayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior PhotographyGuayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, GardenGuayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - More Images+ 20

San Isidro Llano Grande, Mexico
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Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López

Text description provided by the architects. After finding sprouts of the endangered and endemic Guaiacum coulteri species, Fundación Casa Wabi created a nursery for the care and reproduction of Guayacan tree. The Guayacan Nursery is found upon entering the area of Casa Wabi area, next to the entrance. It is the first pavilion by location and the fourth intervention within this complex. However, due to its condition of being half underground, and surrounded by vegetation, it may appear unnoticed.

Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Garden
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López
Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Image 23 of 25
Plan
Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Garden
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López

Touch a tree at night. What does it tell you? 

Now place your ear upon the trunk. What do you hear?

Do it again in the morning, during the rainy season, in the following months, and during the season of drought. What is different?

Is it not obvious that everything is changing?

That we should all transition between heat and cold, between water and thirst, between presence and void, between life and death?

Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López
Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Image 24 of 25
Sections
Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Garden, Forest
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López

From these beginnings and resistances, the wabi-sabi architecture of Guayacán Pavilion was born. The work is an expression of materiality and space itself, where the architecture, developed by the office of AMBROSI ETCHEGARAY, conceived a nursery that in its transition across space and time benefits from its deterioration or its assimilation into the landscape, into nature, the origin of all things. With minimal use of materials, it finds its maximum expression in presenting and nurturing the “Guaiacum Sanctum L. Zygophyllaceae”, colloquially known as Guayacán, is an endemic tree included in the SEMARNAT list of endangered species.

Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Brick, Windows, Garden
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López
Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Garden
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López

With the purpose of protecting the species, Casa Wabi, with support from the Environmental Management Unit (UMA), decided to create a nursery for the care and reproduction of the Guayacán. A project that, from its inception, the authors understood the architect would only be a medium for the expressions that nature offered, so they conceived of a new nursery that invites the users and visitors to descend into the resulting paths beneath the ground level that allowed for a closer interaction to the trees in order to perceive the temperature, the humidity of the atmosphere, the flow of air, and the relationship between the species and the groundwater.

Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Garden
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López
Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray - Exterior Photography, Garden
© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López

Through an imperfect beauty and elegance in austerity, the pavilion opens with a large shade that functions as the entrance threshold while simultaneously generating a resting place for the workers and visitors where the sun, water, and air become apparent and invite us to observe the Guayacán close up, to acquaint or reacquaint ourselves with it in a setting that expresses the depth, emotion, intelligence, and mysticism. One continues to walk through the seedlings that ensue upon a sequence of work tables whose form are the remains of the excavation. Through this change in level, where the ethic seeks to care for the environment as well as to respect those who work there, the personnel in charge of the plants significantly reduce physical exertion as they clean and care for the new trees on the work tables and avoid bending over to work on the ground. Guayacán Pavilion is undoubtedly a work of contemporary architecture that is committed to an aesthetic, the surroundings, the passage of time, and the care for our land.

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Project location

Address:71847 San Isidro Llano Grande, Oax., Mexico

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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: "Guayacan Pavillion / Ambrosi I Etchegaray" 09 Apr 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/999151/guayacan-pavillion-ambrosi-i-etchegaray> ISSN 0719-8884

© Jaime Navarro, Sergio López

愈疮木之亭 / Ambrosi I Etchegaray

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