PILARES
PILARES are small neighborhood hubs that provide social, educational, and cultural infrastructure to residents of Mexico City.
An initiative implemented by the Mayor of Mexico City, these Points of Innovation, Freedom, Art, Education, and Knowledge (PILARES, for its acronym in Spanish), provide local residents access to computers and internet, workshop spaces (carpentry, silk-screen printing, dark room, etc.) and flexible rooms for public gatherings. More than 250 PILARES are planned for Mexico City, and a small part of those were commissioned to architects with a distinguished trajectory.
Designed as a collaboration between Mexican offices PRODUCTORA and Palma, the 2-story and 440 m² structure takes advantage of the physical characteristics of the lot, a small wedge of land in the Center of the Magdelana Contreras borough towards the south-west of Mexico City. The introduction of a perfectly level upper floor creates a stark contrast with our site’s sloping topography. While the lower level digs into the ground, the upper level consists of a dynamic composition of blue boxes with diverse proportions and apertures, creating the required variety of interior spatial qualities.
Understanding the severe budget restrictions and little influence we
would have on the construction, we designed a simple steel structure: a sturdy framework with generous floor heights that could be adapted over time.
The lower-level digs into the ground. It is open and transparent and includes covered outdoor areas where neighbors can shelter from the rain or sun, even when the building is closed. The upper level is claded with industrial insulated panels rendered in a blue textured stucco: a rough application with a DYI feel (almost like a papier-mâché) that expresses the hands-on attitude of the workshops.
The effective and basic construction techniques applied made our PILARES project the only of those specific commissions to be finished within budget and time.