© Hisao Suzuki -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Fernando Alda -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Hisao Suzuki -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Hisao Suzuki -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Hisao Suzuki -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Hisao Suzuki -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Roland Halbe -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Fernando Alda -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Duccio Malagamba -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

© Alberto Piovano -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

Planta tipo -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

Sexta planta -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

Sección canónica -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

Comparativa con la Catedral de Granada -

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

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Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza
Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza

Impluvium of Light Caja Granada

200best ES
Alberto Campo Baeza
2001

Type

Office

Tags

corporate architecture, financial world, 200Best, contemporary munumentality

Visitability

Allowed

Description

In the undefined outskirts of Granada, the central offices of the Caja General, the most significant bank of the city, has been built. A great semi-cubical volume serves as a reference to tense this new part of the city.  In order to resolve the slope of the site and the ground floor level, a great base is created between the two highways that border the site upon which the cubic piece sits.  In this podium, parking and future additions are resolved. The emerging, stereotomic, cubic box, is built of a reinforced concrete grid 3 x 3 x 3 meters, which serves as a mechanism to collect light, the central theme of this architecture.  The two southern facades function as a "brise-soleil," finely shading the potent light, and providing illumination to the areas of open offices.  The two northern facades, giving onto the individual offices, receive the homogeneous and continuous light characteristic of this orientation, and are enclosed by stone and glass in horizontal bands. The central interior courtyard, a true "impluvium  of light," gathers the solid southern light from the skylights and, reflected by the alabaster parameters, augments the illumination of the open offices.  Functionally the building has a great capacity, flexibility, and simplicity. Simply, it is a stereotomic, containing, stone and concrete box, that traps sunlight in its interior to serve a tectonic, contained, box enclosed in an efficient "impluvium of light."  A diagonal space crossed by a diagonal light. (Courtesy of Alberto Campo Baeza)