use it.

Another excellent Kirsten Dirksen video….this time about an old cement factory that has been reworked and given new life.

How many buildings are out there that could be rehabbed and turned into something useful and beautiful?

Of course, it takes a lot of vision and hard work…and a lot of money….to do something on this scale, but you could take something small like a house and turn it into something pretty nice.

It’s all beautiful….and hopeful….to see this reuse.

Everything old doesn’t have to just rot into the ground.

Here’s the description of the structures from the YouTube site….

When architect Ricardo Bofill discovered an abandoned cement factory outside Barcelona, he was inspired to give the place a new life. After two years of work he turned 30 silos, 4,000 meters of underground galleries and a 105 meter smoke stack into his home and the offices of his Taller de Arquitectura (notable works include Les Halles and the Christian Dior headquarters in Paris, Shisheido building Tokyo, JP Morgan skyscraper Chicago and the Shangri-La Hotel Beijing).

The transformation of factory to home office was a process of destruction. Destroying 22 of the 30 silos, Bofill searched for hidden forms in the abandoned buildings. The process was “like a work of sculpture in concrete.”

Today, “La Fabrica” (The Factory) is a monument to adaptive reuse, a castle of Brutalist architecture, and enduring proof that Bofill could turn “the most ugly thing” into something beautiful.

The silos, which once held concrete, now house architects and overnight guests. Underground passageways, now daylighted with huge skylights, connect a labyrinth of laboratories (including one for 3D modeling), archive space and even an employee kitchen.

The most spectacular space is ““La Catedral” (The Cathedral) which earns it’s name with its 10-meter-high ceilings and concrete relics from its industrial past. It’s now used for meetings, exhibitions and concerts. Bofill’s own home sits above La Catedral with it’s own impressive, high-ceilinged space called “Sala Cúbica” (“cubed hall”).

The work is vivid proof of the idea that function can follow form. “Many people say that something has to look like what it does and it’s not necessary,” explains Jean-Pierre Carniaux, partner at Taller de Arquitectura for 4 decades. “You know instead of being full of gravel it’s full of architects.”

Taller de Arquitectura: http://www.ricardobofill.com

Original story: http://faircompanies.com/videos/view/…

About Peter Rorvig

I'm a non-practicing artist, a mailman, a husband, a father...not listed in order of importance. I believe that things can always get better....and that things are usually better than we think.

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