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Bodegas Ysios
Laguardia, Spain
Santiago Calatrava
An undulating building harmonizes with
the mountains and earth
© Roland Halbe
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For more photos click on 'photos
& drawings' above.
To see the people and products
behind this project click on 'people & products.'
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By David Cohn
The Ysios Winery, located just north
of the classic wine-growing region of La Rioja in the province
of Álava, enjoys growing conditions that promise to
yield high-quality wines. To give a distinctive image to this
new label, the company turned to Santiago Calatrava for the
design of its building.
The newly planted vineyards (160 acres
of tempranillo grapes) lie at the foot of the Cantabrian Range,
just north of the fortified medieval hill town of Laguardia,
amid an open countryside with extensive views. The 86,000-square-foot
winery building is visible from the passing highway and the
town. Calatravas building takes advantage of this spectacular
site, drawing casual visitors as well as organized tours of
wine enthusiasts. The facility has a capacity of 1.5 million
bottles a year and is designed for possible future expansion.
The architect faced the difficult task
of making an industrial building a landmark with a limited
budget of $6 million, or roughly $70 a square foot. For the
winery, Calatrava developed a repertoire of dynamic structural
forms drawn from history, specifically a family of curves
found in the thin-shell concrete vaults of Felix Candela and
other engineers in the 1960s.
The structure employs laminated wood
beams of Scandinavian fir, which span 85 feet between the
front and back of the building, rising up and down along the
exterior walls in sine curves. Reflective aluminum sheeting
serves as the finishing material for the roof.
More than 640 feet long, the winery is
oriented so its main elevation faces south, toward Laguardia
and the highway. The north and south walls undulate in plan,
which maximizes their stiffness while reducing their thickness.
Calatrava finished the south facade with horizontal strips
of cedar to match the tonalities of the earth under the vines,
and he added a reflecting pool with a mosaic border of broken
ceramic tiles that runs the full length of the building.
In a dramatic, baroque gesture, the architect
applied an exaggerated kick to the buildings central
curves so the roof beams here project an additional 33 feet
into the air. He likens this thrusting central bay to the
mountain peaks behind the structure. The feature accommodates
an upper-level dining room for visitors, who enjoy views through
high, angled windows. An axial path through the vineyards
leads to the visitors entrance below the dining room
and reveals the buildings perfect alignment with the
hilltop church of Laguardia a mile or so away.
The interior of the winery unfolds in
a roughly linear sequence on two levels, with hoppers of grapes
entering on the west and finished cases of bottled wine exiting
to the east. Calatrava exposed the utilitarian nature of the
interiors, specifying simple materials and finishes and allowing
the swooping ceilings and zigzagging walls to provide the
visual excitement.
See the May 2003 issue of Architectural
Record for full coverage of this project.
Formal name
of Project:
Bodegas Ysios
Location:
Laguardia, Spain
Architect:
Santiago Calatrava, S.A.: Santiago Calatrava
www.calatrava.com
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