Darcons Headquarters / Arquitectura en Proceso
Architects: Arquitectura en Proceso
Location: Chihuahua, Mexico
Project Team: Jorge Cajiga, Raúl Rodríguez, Roberto Villarreal, Reyes Baeza
Structural Engineering: EASA construcciones
Project Managment: Urbanismo y Edificación Mexicana
Structural Design: Estructuristas y Consultores
Project Area: 1,406 sqm
Design Year: 2005
Construction Year: 2008
The site is located at a suburban lot of a middle size city in northern Mexico.
As one drives towards it and away from de city, the building appears aligned
with the road as an arched gate of a medieval town: looking through it one gets
the scenery of the rural fields that surround the city.
The building was conceived as a frame that captures part of the landscape and
at the same time defines a plane that divides the intercity from the suburbs.
The skin of the building plays a dual role: on one hand it is the transparent
material that allows the view through it, and on the other hand, it is the
opaque continuous skin that defines the shape of the frame and protects the
interior from solar irradiance. This skin was manipulated in order to differentiate
the public space from the internal activities of the company: the main
reception and the costumer rooms are outside the envelope raised above the
ground as a Piano Nobile and organized as self defined entities. The operation
space is contained within the envelope and flows throughout the building in a
three dimensional open plan that honors the hierarchical organization of the
company. In order to solve the continuity of the circulation the mass of the
building was divided in various transversal slices, each presenting an
intentionally different profile and two of them defining the geometry of the
north and south elevations. The sequential juncture of all the slices creates
deviations and convergences between the internal operational route and the external
costumer route.
The rule was meant to be broken at the main entrance where the opaque skin
suddenly sift direction to frame a cantilevered volume that flies above the
portico. This creates a gesture of urban scale to emphasize the hierarchy of
the entrance and contain the atrium of the building prior to the stair flight.