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In order to reduce the volume of the building, service spaces form a belt attached to the main structure, that wrap the old rear walls of the surrounding barns. The same cobblestone that paves the out
© Miguel de Guzmán
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The same zinc that covers the slopped roofs is used to wrap the facades facing North. The backstage can open to the square so technical resources of the theater can be used also to perform towards the
© Miguel de Guzmán
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Raw materials (concrete, earthenware, cobblestone...) combine in the main foyer. It has been shaped merging a small stands auditorium, and several niches, among which the cloakroom (its desk made of f
© Miguel de Guzmán
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The seats of the auditorium are coloured pixels. Viewed from the stage the anamorphose composes an always looking eye, that replaces the composes an always looking eye, that replaces the audience s gl
© Miguel de Guzmán
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In the bathrooms, visitors can dress up in a similar way as the actors might be doing. Since bathrooms are placed over the main entrance, peepholes allow people to secretly stare at arrivers while u
© Miguel de Guzmán
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Cork sheets (natural, mate, and glossy) combine to side the rehearsal room. As in the auditorium, paired light bulbs with vinyl dots become a virtual audience.
© Miguel de Guzmán
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The building wraps the old, decayed rear walls of the surrounding houses. Although the site will connect in the future with a new urban development, at the present time the building area is only reach
© Miguel de Guzmán
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Apart form an optimal situation for loading material, the backstage door enables the stage to be used to perform towards the plaza
© Miguel de Guzmán
Zafra s New Theater
Enrique Krahe. Badajoz, Spain
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Name of work in English
Zafra s New Theater
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Name of work in original language
Nuevo Teatro de Zafra
Prize year
EUmies Awards 2011
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Work Location
Badajoz, Spain
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Studio
Enrique Krahe
EUmies Awards 2011 Nominees
Collaborators
Program
Culture
Completion
2009
ZAFRA S NEW THEATER Public space needs to be continuously reinvented: design premises that prioritize patrimonial or landscape values are compatible with others where recreational or environmental aspects prevail. Located in a small town in the south west of Spain, the Theater of Zafra aims to reconcile the different events that are everyday staged, solving the transition between the monumental city and a periphery under construction, through a smooth connection with the pedestrian center. The new organization provides free paths with gentle slopes that allow full accessibility for visitors and restricted to vehicles. Portuguese cobblestone pavements and terraced gardens cover the open air space, delimited by ancient modest buildings in which vernacular elements (masonry vaults and slate walls) were consolidated in order to preserve them for a future enlargement of the cultural activities. The irregularity of the plot triggered an occupation strategy of the site by 'spreading' the functional program to create a new envelope with a scale close of that of existing the buildings, absorbing the disordered geometry and offering a representative image. The main volume (containing the orchestra, stage, main halls and a rehearsal room) emerges amplifying the landscape formed by the arabtile roofs. The design tackles the desirable technical adequacy and versatility of this type of facilities in a small city (film, theater, concert hall...). But beyond a mere functional or contemplative affection, the building challenges the traditional role of spectators as passive ingredients, inviting them to achieve certain degree of complicity with both visitors and passersby, so they can get involved even when a representation is not taking place. Several 'architectonic devices' assist on this task. For instance, the stage (in addition to offering a position that favors the direct loading and unloading) can literally open to the city and its citizens, while the seats of the orchestra are colored pixels that, viewed from the stage when empty, compose the anamorphosis of an alwayslooking eye surrounded by the natural feltsided walls of this space. Theaters are supposed to be venues functionally designed to stimulate some sort of reverie. Therefore, they have traditionally restricted and moderated the effect of natural light, in favor of a sophisticated lighting control, which rarely is fed back by its typological or programmatic particularities. At the Theater of Zafra, lighting participates of the general concepts underlying the project, and acquires an active responsibility that reinforces the playful nature of the program, creating a second graphic level, guiding visitors through the less crowded areas, and helping to create a calm and evocative atmosphere, as an accomplice preparation for the drama representation that awaits. Following and mirroring other reuse strategies deployed along the building (washing machines doors as windows, felt leftovers for furniture, cylinder drills for drumseats ), satellite dishes have been reconverted into highperformance, lowbudget lamps, forming some kind of technological cloud above the foyers.