Stunning buildings made from raw imperfect materials Dbora Mesa Molina

Architecture is a profession
with many rules,

some written, some not,

some relevant and others not.

As architects,
we’re constantly gravitating

between following these rules by the book

or making a space for imagination –

for experimentation.

This is a difficult balance.

Especially through architecture,

you’re trying to challenge preconceptions
and push boundaries and innovate,

even if just using what we have around
and we overlook all the time.

And this is what I’ve been doing
along with my team,

Ensamble Studio,

and from our very early works

that happened
in strict historic contexts,

like the city of Santiago de Compostela.

Here we built the General Society
of Authors and Editors,

a cultural building.

And on top of all the regulations,

we had to use stone by code

and our experience was limited,

but we had incredible
references to learn from,

some coming from the city itself

or from nearby landscapes

or other remote places

that had impacted
our education as architects,

and maybe you recognize here.

But somehow the finished products
that industry made available

for us as architects
to use in our buildings

seemed to have lost their soul.

And so we decided to go
to the nearby quarries

to better understand the process
that transforms a mountain

into a perfectly square tile
that you buy from a supplier.

And we were taken by the monumental
scale of the material

and the actions to extract it.

And looking carefully,

we noticed hundreds of irregular
blocks piling up everywhere.

They are the leftovers
of an extraction sequence:

the ugly parts that nobody wants.

But we wanted them.

We were inspired.

And it was a win-win situation

where we could get this residual
material of great quality,

doomed to be crushed,

at a very low cost.

Now, we had to convince our clients
that this was a good idea;

but foremost, we had to come up
with a design process

to reuse these randomly shaped rocks,

and we had not done this before.

Today everything would be much easier

because we would go to the quarry

with our smartphones
equipped with 3-D scanners

and we would document each rock,

turn that into a digital model –

highly engineer the whole process.

But more than a decade ago,

we had to embrace uncertainty

and put on our boots, roll up our sleeves

and move to the quarry
for a hands-on experience.

And we also had to become the contractors

because we failed at finding somebody
willing to share the risk with us.

Now, luckily, we convinced the quarry team
to help us build a few prototypes

to resolve some of the technical details.

And we agreed on a few mock-ups,

but we got excited,

and one stone led to another

until we succeeded to build

an 18-meter-long
by eight-meter-high structure

that recycled all the amorphous
material of the quarry,

just supported by gravity –

no mortar and no ties.

And once built and tested,

moving it to the final site
in the city center

to unite it with the rest of the building

was a piece of cake,

because by having isolated uncertainty

and managed risk in the controlled
environment of the quarry,

we were able to complete
the whole building in time

and on budget,

even if using nonconventional
means and methods.

And I still get goosebumps

when I see this big chunk
of the industrial landscape

in the city,

in a building,

experienced by the visitors
and the neighbors.

This building gave us
quite a few headaches,

and so it could have well been
an exception in our work,

but instead it started to inform
a modus operandi

where every project
becomes this opportunity

to test the limits of a discipline
we believe has to be urgently reimagined.

So what you see here are four homes

that we have designed,
built and inhabited.

Four manifestos where
we are using the small scale

to ask ourselves big questions.

And we are trying to discover
the architectures

that result from unconventional
applications of pretty mundane materials

and technologies,

like concrete in different forms
in the top row,

or steel and foam in the bottom row.

Take, for instance,
these precast concrete beams.

You have probably seen them

building bridges, highways,
water channels –

we found them on one of our visits
to a precast concrete factory.

And they might not seem
especially homey or beautiful,

but we decided to use them
to build our first house.

And this was an incredible moment

because we got to be architects as always,

builders once more

and, for the first time,
we could be our own clients.

So, here we are trying to figure out
how we can take these huge catalogue beams

of about 20 tons each

and stack them progressively
around a courtyard space …

the heart of the house.

And due to the dimensions
and their material quality,

these big parts are the structure
that carry the loads to the ground,

but they are much more than that.

They are the swimming pool;

they are the walls that divide
interior from exterior;

they are the windows that frame the views;

they are the finishes;

they are the very spirit of this house.

A house that is for us a laboratory

where we are testing how we can use
standard elements in nonstandard ways.

And we are observing
that the results are intriguing.

And we are learning by doing

that prefabrication
can be much more than stacking boxes

or that heavy parts
can be airy and transparent.

And on top of designing
and building this house,

we get invaluable feedback,

sharing it with our family
and our friends

because this is our life

and our work in progress.

The lessons that we learn here
get translated into other projects

and other programs

and other scales as well,

and they inspire new work.

Here again we are looking
at very standard products:

galvanized steel studs
that can be easily cut and screwed,

insulating foams, cement boards –

all materials that you can find
hidden in partition walls

and that we are exposing;

and we are using them to build
a very lightweight construction system

that can be built almost by anyone.

And we are doing it ourselves
with our hands in our shop,

and we are architects.
We’re not professional builders

but we want to make sure it’s possible.

And it’s so nice that Antón
can move it with his hands

and Javier can put it in a container,

and we can ship it

like you would ship your belongings
if you were moving abroad …

which is what we did five years ago.

We moved our gravity center from Madrid

and the house of the concrete
beams to Brookline.

And we found the ugly duckling
of a very nice neighborhood:

a one-story garage
and the only thing we could afford.

But it was OK because we wanted
to transform it into a swan,

installing on top
our just-delivered kit of parts,

once more becoming the scientists
and the guinea pigs.

So this is a house
that uses some of the cheapest

and most normal materials
that you can find in the market

that applies the ubiquitous
four-by-eight modulation

that governs the construction industry.

And yet a different
organization of the spaces

and a different assembly of the parts

is able to transform
an economically built home

into a luxurious space.

And now, we’re dreaming and we’re
actively working with developers,

with builders,

with communities

to try to make this a reality
for many more homes

and many more families.

And you see, the world around us
is an infinite source of inspiration

if we are curious enough
to see beneath the surface of things.

Now I’m going to take you
to the other side of the moon:

to the sublime landscape of Montana,

where a few years ago
we joined Cathy and Peter Halstead

to imagine Tippet Rise Art Center
on a 10,000-acre working ranch.

And when we first visited the site,

we realized that all we knew
about what an art center is

was absolutely pointless for that client,

for that community, for that landscape.

The kind of white-box museum type
had no fit here.

So we decided to explode the center
into a constellation of fragments,

of spaces spread
across the vast territory

that would immerse the visitors
into the wilderness of this amazing place.

So back in the office,
we are thinking through making,

using the land both as support
and as material,

learning from its geological processes
of sedimentation, erosion,

fragmentation, crystallization –

explosion –

to discover architectures
that are born from the land,

that are visceral extensions
of the landscape,

like this bridge
that crosses Murphy Canyon.

Or this fountain.

Like this space topping a hill …

or this theatre that brings to us
the space of the mountains

and its sound.

And in order to realize this idea,

construction cannot be perfectly planned.

We need to embrace the drastic weather
and the local craft.

We need to control
just those aspects that are critical,

like the structural, the thermal,

the acoustical properties
embedded in the form.

But otherwise, improvisation
is welcome and is provoked.

And the moment of construction
is still a moment of design

and a moment of celebration

where different hands, hearts, minds
come together to perform a final dance.

And the result then cannot be anticipated.

It comes as a surprise.

And we unwrap architecture
like you would unwrap a birthday gift.

Architecture isn’t uncovered:

it’s discovered.

It’s extracted from the guts
of the earth to build a shelter,

one of the most basic human needs.

Architecture, art, landscape,

archaeology, geology – all made one.

And by using the resources
at our disposal in radical ways,

by making a space for experimentation,

we are able to bring to light
architectures that find the beauty latent

in the raw and imperfect
things that surround us,

that elevate them

and let them speak their own language.

Thank you.

(Applause)

建筑是一个
有很多规则的职业,

有些是书面的,有些不是,

有些是相关的,有些不是。

作为建筑师,
我们不断地

在遵循这些规则

或为想象创造空间——

进行实验之间徘徊。

这是一个艰难的平衡。

尤其是通过建筑,

你试图挑战先入为主的观念
,突破界限和创新,

即使只是利用我们周围的东西,我们一直
忽视。

这就是我
和我的团队

Ensamble Studio 一直在做的事情,

以及我们

在严格的历史背景下发生的早期作品,

比如圣地亚哥德孔波斯特拉市。

在这里,我们建造
了作家和编辑总协会,

一座文化建筑。

除了所有规定之外,

我们必须按代码使用石头

,我们的经验有限,

但我们有令人难以置信的
参考资料可供学习,

其中一些来自城市本身,

或者来自附近的景观

或其他

影响
我们教育的偏远地区 建筑师

,也许你认识这里。

但不知何故
,工业

为我们作为建筑师
在我们的建筑物中使用的成品

似乎已经失去了灵魂。

因此,我们决定
前往附近的采石场,

以更好地了解
将一座山

转变为
您从供应商处购买的完美方形瓷砖的过程。

我们被材料的巨大
规模

和提取它的行动所吸引。

仔细观察,

我们发现到处都是数百个不规则的
块。

它们是提取序列的剩余

部分:没人想要的丑陋部分。

但我们想要他们。

我们受到启发。

这是一个双赢的局面

,我们可以以非常低的成本获得这种
质量上乘

、注定要被压碎的残余材料

现在,我们必须让我们的客户
相信这是个好主意;

但最重要的是,我们必须
想出一个设计过程

来重复使用这些随机形状的岩石,

而我们以前没有这样做过。

今天一切都会变得容易得多,

因为我们会

带着
配备 3-D 扫描仪的智能手机去采石场

,我们会记录每块岩石,

将其转化为数字模型——

对整个过程进行高度工程化。

但十多年前,

我们不得不接受不确定性

,穿上靴子,卷起袖子

,前往
采石场亲身体验。

而且我们还不得不成为承包商,

因为我们未能找到
愿意与我们分担风险的人。

现在,幸运的是,我们说服采石场
团队帮助我们构建了一些原型

来解决一些技术细节。

我们同意了几个模型,

但我们很兴奋

,一块石头导致另一块石头,

直到我们成功建造

了一个 18 米长
x 8 米高的结构

,回收
了采石场的所有无定形材料,

只是 由重力支撑——

没有迫击炮,也没有领带。

一旦建成并经过测试,

将其移动到市中心的最终地点
以将

其与建筑物的其他部分结合起来

是小菜一碟,

因为通过在采石场的受控环境中隔离不确定性

和管理风险

我们能够

即使使用非常规的
手段和方法,也要在预算内按时完成整个建筑。

当我看到这座城市的一
大片工业景观

时,我仍然会起鸡皮疙瘩,

在一座建筑物中,

游客
和邻居都体验过。

这座建筑让我们
头疼不已

,因此它很可能
是我们工作中的一个例外,

但相反,它开始为我们
的工作方式提供信息

,即每个项目都
成为

测试我们认为必须紧迫的学科极限的机会
重新想象。

所以你在这里看到的

是我们设计、
建造和居住的四个房屋。

四个宣言,
我们用小

规模问自己大问题。

我们正在尝试发现


非常普通的材料

和技术的非常规应用所产生的架构,

例如顶行中不同形式的混凝土

或底行中的钢和泡沫。


这些预制混凝土梁为例。

您可能已经看到他们

建造桥梁、高速公路、
水渠——

我们在一次
访问预制混凝土工厂时发现了他们。

它们可能看起来不是
特别温馨或美丽,

但我们决定用它们
来建造我们的第一所房子。

这是一个令人难以置信的时刻,

因为我们必须像往常一样成为建筑师,

再次成为建造

者,
而且我们第一次可以成为我们自己的客户。

所以,在这里,我们试图
弄清楚我们如何能够将这些

每根约 20 吨的巨大目录梁,

并逐渐将它们堆叠
在庭院空间周围……

房子的中心。

由于尺寸
和材料质量,

这些大部件是
将负载带到地面的结构,

但它们远不止于此。

它们是游泳池;

它们是分隔内外的墙

它们是构成景观的窗户;

他们是终点;

他们是这所房子的灵魂。

一所房子对我们来说是一个实验室

,我们正在测试如何
以非标准方式使用标准元素。

我们观察
到结果很有趣。

而且我们通过这样做来学习

,预制
不仅仅是堆叠盒子,

或者重型部件
可以通风和透明。

除了设计
和建造这座房子之外,

我们还获得了宝贵的反馈,

并与家人和朋友分享,

因为这是我们的生活

和正在进行的工作。

我们在这里学到的经验也
被转化为其他项目

、其他计划

和其他规模

,它们激发了新的工作。

在这里,我们再次看到
了非常标准的产品:

易于切割和拧紧的镀锌钢螺柱、

绝缘泡沫、水泥板——

您可以
在隔墙中找到所有隐藏的材料

,而我们正在暴露这些材料;

我们正在使用它们来构建
一个非常轻量级的构建系统

,几乎任何人都可以构建它。

我们自己
动手在我们的商店里做这件事

,我们是建筑师。
我们不是专业的建设者,

但我们想确保它是可能的。

太好了,Antón
可以用手移动它

,Javier 可以把它放在一个容器里

,我们可以

像你在国外搬家一样运送你的物品
……

这就是我们五年前所做的。

我们把重心从马德里

和混凝土梁的房子
搬到了布鲁克莱恩。

我们发现
了一个非常好的社区的丑小鸭:

一个单层车库
,也是我们唯一买得起的东西。

但这没关系,因为我们
想把它变成一只天鹅,

安装在
我们刚刚交付的零件套件上,

再次成为科学家
和豚鼠。

所以这是
一座使用市场上最便宜

和最普通的材料的房子,这些材料

应用了无处不在的
四乘八调制

,这种调制控制着建筑行业。

然而,不同
的空间组织

和不同的部件组装

能够
将经济建造的住宅

转变为豪华空间。

现在,我们正在梦想,我们正在
积极与开发商

、建筑商

和社区

合作,努力
让更多家庭

和更多家庭实现这一目标。

你看,

如果我们有足够的好奇心
去了解事物的表面之下,我们周围的世界就是无限的灵感来源。

现在我要
带你去月球的另一边:

去蒙大拿的壮丽景观

,几年前,
我们和凯茜和彼得霍尔斯特德一起

在一个占地 10,000 英亩的工作牧场上想象了蒂佩特崛起艺术中心。

当我们第一次访问该网站时,

我们意识到我们所
知道的关于艺术中心的一切

对于那个客户

、那个社区、那个风景来说绝对毫无意义。

那种白盒博物馆
类型不适合这里。

因此,我们决定将中心炸
成碎片群

,空间分布
在广阔的领土

上,让游客沉浸
在这个神奇地方的荒野中。

所以回到办公室,
我们正在考虑制作,

将土地作为支撑
和材料,

从它
的沉积、侵蚀、

破碎、结晶

——爆炸的地质过程中学习,

以发现
从土地中诞生的建筑,


是景观的内在延伸,

就像这座
横跨墨菲峡谷的桥一样。

或者这个喷泉。

就像这个山顶的空间……

或者这个给我们带来
山脉空间

和声音的剧院。

而为了实现这个想法,

建设不可能完美地规划。

我们需要接受恶劣的天气
和当地的工艺。

我们只需要
控制那些至关重要的方面,

例如嵌入形式中的结构、热

、声学特性

但除此之外,即兴创作
是受欢迎的,也是被激怒的。

建造
的时刻仍然是

设计的时刻和庆祝的时刻

,不同的手、心、思想
聚集在一起表演最后的舞蹈。

结果是无法预料的。

这是一个惊喜。

我们
像打开生日礼物一样打开建筑。

建筑没有被发现:

它是被发现的。

它是从地球的内脏中提取出来的
,用于建造避难所,

这是人类最基本的需求之一。

建筑、艺术、景观、

考古、地质——都合而为一。

通过
以激进的方式利用我们所掌握的资源,

通过为实验创造空间,

我们能够揭示
那些发现我们周围

原始和不完美
事物中潜伏的美的建筑

,提升它们

并让它们说出自己的想法 自己的语言。

谢谢你。

(掌声)