ARCHIVE


Article from issue 11/2007 »Refurbishment«

Church Appendage in Jerez

documentation    p. 1290 - 1293
Architect Martínez Garcia, Antonio | Trillo de Leyva, Juan Luis |

Drafts
1:1000 Site plan
1:20 Sectional details
1:250 Floor plans
1:250 Sections

In the Andalusian city Jerez, the Brotherhood of the Holy Cross is lodged between an exterior wall of the San Juan de los Caballeros church and a stone facade believed to date to the late eighteenth century. This narrow slot is in essence a structural cavity which organises the church’s massive buttresses in three segments. The aforementioned elaborate facade, with the customary cantilevering balconies, was designed – comparable to a stage set – in a dialogue with the outdoor space, oblivious to the diminutive spaces behind it. It was possible to eke out just two small rooms and a stairway per floor.
In order to obtain better proportioned and utilisable interior spaces, the architects had the nineteenth-century ceilings completely removed. Then the church’s stone walls and facade were cleansed and sand-blasted.
Built-in furniture and surfaces in wood dominate the interiors: ceilings, floors, and the stair, as well as partition walls and bespoke furnishings give the impression of a large, continuous piece of wooden furniture, replacing the original structure, completely filling the available space and metamorphosing back and forth form object to cladding – and in this manner the angles and proportions were also corrected. In addition, this “dry construction type” makes it possible to better protect the old stone walls. The new structural system makes use of the original structural members’ bearing surfaces, which are recessed in the walls. Due to structural considerations, neither the location nor the dimensions of the existing low, narrow openings which cut through the church’s buttresses could not be altered : in fact, the buttresses had been compromised more than two hundred years ago when these spaces were first created. During this renovation the openings – and as a result the buttresses – were reinforced structurally, and continue to link the three spaces on each floor. A new skylight directs ample light into the vertical circulation space through which the woodwork ascends. Gothic masonry from San Juan’s first construction phase and an ashlar wall from a Renaissance extension were uncovered by archaeological exploration and are visible in these spaces.


Related Topics in the Archive

all articles about Refurbishment
   Taking a Second Look: Diocesan Museum in Eichstätt
   Spaces for a 21st century society – an interview with Toyo Ito


Related Articles to this Region

about the country of Spain
   Jerez de la Frontera


Related Topics on DETAIL.de

all articles about Refurbishment
   Moorish market transformed into part of a university
   DETAIL English 4/2011: Refurbishment
   DETAIL German/English 5/2011: Refurbishment





DETAIL 11/2007

Refurbishment

€ 14.50

>> order
DETAIL ENGLISH 1/2008

Refurbishment

€ 16.82

>> order

Article for viewing in German / English

Download* Article in German / English

*Will be charged: 5.00 EUR, 4.00 EUR for subscribers

Advertisment

Language

Deutsch English Italiano Espanol Français

User Login

Newsletter:

>> Archive

DETAIL Network

Profiles+ProjectsProfiles+Projects

Partner Links

About Detail | FAQ | GTaC | Imprint | Rate Card | Recommend this site | Sitemap

Detail, 08.02.2012