Sergio Gomez

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Understanding Eco Brutalism: The Paradox of Structure, Sustainability, and Style

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The built environment is expected to reduce carbon emissions, support biodiversity, and respond to changing ecological conditions, all while providing housing for communities and reflecting their cultural values. In this shifting landscape, a once-maligned architectural style emerges in a surprising new form. Brutalism, long associated with institutional gravitas and material austerity, is now being reframed through an ecological lens. This hybrid movement, known as eco-brutalism, combines the power of concrete with greenery and climate-sensitive design strategies. The result is a set of spaces that are visually arresting, conceptually complex, and increasingly popular among designers, urban planners, and the general public. This movement includes not only the direct lineage of 1960s Brutalism but also contemporary projects that, while not strictly Brutalist, share its material honesty, monumental scale, and use of expressive concrete forms.

Understanding Eco Brutalism:  The Paradox of Structure, Sustainability, and Style - More Images+ 39

MOVA Teacher Innovation Center / OPUS

MOVA Teacher Innovation Center / OPUS - More Images+ 24

  • Architects: OPUS
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  7000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Arkos, Cimbrados

Concrete Wonders: 40 Impressive Details Using the Cement-Based Building Material

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Due to its ability to mold and create different shapes, concrete is one of architecture's most popular materials. While one of its most common uses is as a humble foundation, its plasticity means that it is also used in almost all types of construction, from housing to museums, presenting a variety of details of work that deserves special attention.

Check out this collection of 40 projects that highlight the use of concrete. Impressive! 

Colombian Houses: Examples of Floor Plans, Design, and Materials

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For much of the world, this past year was spent within the confines of our homes, undoubtedly blurring the lines between our public, professional, and private lives and transforming our living spaces into places of work and productivity. This transformation of spaces and how they are used is nothing new in the world of architecture as countless spaces take on various roles beyond what they were originally designed for--a fact reflected in their layout, design, and the materials used within them.

Architecture Guide to Medellín: 19 Places that Every Architect Should Visit

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In 2013, Medellín (Colombia) was declared the most innovative city in the world as part of the City of the Year Competition, organized by the Wall Street Journal. It competed alongside metropolises like New York and Tel Aviv.

The Antioquian capital has become one of the most advanced technological and intellectual epicenters in Colombia, not to mention the important urban development that has occurred in the city since the beginning of 2010. The city’s mobility-orientated integrated infrastructure together with interventions of high social impact have turned Medellín into the center of the debate on the growth and development of Latin American cities.

The following projects tell you the story of a city that bet on urban consolidation through quality public spaces and projects that encouraged citizen management by supporting the development of marginalized areas in a process of social reconstruction, where architecture has played an important role as a spatial formulation tool.

Replacing Asphalt Can Build a More Sustainable and Open City

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The City Prosperity Index, CPI, set by UN-Habitat, evaluates urban prosperity according to five parameters as productivity, infrastructure development, environmental sustainability, quality of life, and equity/social inclusion. To a greater or lesser extent, these five factors are represented in the street pattern of every city in the world. Streets have multiple functions as the mobility of people and goods, the supply of energy, water, and information, the collection of waste, the growth of trees, plants, insects or birds, the shadow and sun radiation, the bench where to sit, the place to salute and talk with your neighbors, a playground, or the access to the bakery where you buy the bread. In this sense, streets are public and vibrant spaces, which can perform multiple functions and activities.

Houses in Colombia: Shade, Ventilation, and Nature

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For houses throughout the world, the barriers between the inside and outside of houses are solid and well-defined, allowing the spaces within the home to be protected from the weather conditions outside and made comfortable for the inhabitants inside. In countries like Colombia, which sit close to the equator and enjoy a warm, subtropical climate, temperatures average just above ideal thermal comfort.

Antioquia's Educational Parks: 13 Examples of Learning-Centered Infrastructure in Colombia

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Educational architecture is crucial for creating spaces that, not only nurture and mold the minds of the future generations, but also provide spaces for the wider public to come and share knowledge and ideas. 

MIM Itinerant Museum of Memory and Identity of Montes de María / AEU

MIM Itinerant Museum of Memory and Identity of Montes de María / AEU - More Images+ 20

  • Architects: AEU Arquitectos
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1926 ft²
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2019
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  AutoDesk, HASSLACHER NORICA TIMBER, Trimble Navigation

Public Spaces and Human Scale: The City at Eye Level While Moving at 5 KM/H

During the first days of the quarantine, we noticed a drastic change throughout the world's cities—streets, plazas, and parks deserted and devoid of life, putting into perspective the powerful effect that humans have on urban spaces. Here, we have compiled a list of projects and spaces that show just how humans bring life to the places they inhabit.

Ventilation and Shade: Permeable Walls in Colombian Architecture

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In countries where architecture adapts to the seasons, projects must respond so that they are comfortable for the users, both in the hot summer temperatures and in the cold winter. Tropical countries, such as Colombia, are a bit luckier. The temperature of construction sites depends less on the seasons and more on where they are located geographically according to the altitude above sea level; the closer they are to the sea, the warmer it is. For this reason, it is not essential to seal or insulate the interior spaces. On the contrary, the good management of constant ventilation creates a more permeable and contextual architecture.

We have put together a series of projects with different architectural programs: local markets, health facilities, cultural, education and housing projects. They show that with different construction techniques, you can begin to control the permeability, air flow, privacy or solar heat gain. Explore each of these projects below.

El Recreo Kindergarten / DARP - De Arquitectura y Paisaje

El Recreo Kindergarten / DARP - De Arquitectura y Paisaje - More Images+ 28

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  5013
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2019
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Louis Poulsen, Alfa, Argos, Gerflor, Hunter Douglas, +1

Gramalote Market Square / Niro Arquitectura + OAU | Oficina de Arquitectura & Urbanismo

Gramalote Market Square / Niro Arquitectura + OAU | Oficina de Arquitectura & Urbanismo - More Images+ 10

Gramalote, Colombia

Giancarlo Mazzanti on Social Spaces for Learning

Giancarlo Mazzanti on Social Spaces for Learning - Image 1 of 4Giancarlo Mazzanti on Social Spaces for Learning - Image 2 of 4Giancarlo Mazzanti on Social Spaces for Learning - Image 3 of 4Giancarlo Mazzanti on Social Spaces for Learning - Image 4 of 4Giancarlo Mazzanti on Social Spaces for Learning - More Images+ 3

PLANE—SITE has released a new film showcasing the work and ideas of Bogotá-based architect Giancarlo Mazzanti, founder of El Equipo de Mazzanti. In this video interview, Mazzanti elaborates on his experimental approach to design research and explores several of his spaces for learning. His firm is behind numerous schools and educational centers, designed to encourage playful and exploratory movement and social relations. As the video explore, Mazzanti creates scenarios for play in daily life.

School and Daycare Projects for Different Climates

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European children spend approximately 200 days a year at primary school. Even though the academic year in most parts of the world is not as long as in Europe, the place where children and adolescents spend the most time, following their own homes, is usually in educational institutions. These can be places for learning, playing and socializing, and as sad as it may be, they can also be safer places for children living in environments of abandonment, hunger, and violence, providing them with opportunities and even meals. A United Kingdom-wide survey found that the differences in physical characteristics of classrooms accounted for 16% of the variations in learning progress over the course of a year. In other words, the better a classroom is designed, the better children perform academically. According to the study, the factors that most affect children are sunlight, indoor air quality, acoustic environment, temperature, the design of the classroom itself and the stimulation within it.

Dos Maderos House / Jaime Rendon Arquitectos

Dos Maderos House / Jaime Rendon Arquitectos - More Images+ 32

Medellín, Colombia
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1798
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Decorcerámica, Productos locales de Villeta

Arts Center / taller de arquitectura de bogotá

Arts Center / taller de arquitectura de bogotá - More Images+ 6

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  2816
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2009
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Alfa, Cemex, Diaco, Ladrillera Santafé, Metasa, +1

Balmoral House / Jaime Rendon Arquitectos

Balmoral House / Jaime Rendon Arquitectos - More Images+ 21

Medellín, Colombia
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  615
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Canteandes, Designtherapy, Energia Solar, Rouucast