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Centre for Culture and Community is a research prototype designed by noa*

The Centre for Culture and Community or CeCuCo is a complex research prototype in which noa* questions what form flexibility takes, with the belief that a project only works when people make it their own

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CeCuCo, or Centre for Culture and Community, is a research project with an ambitious task—to design a cultural centre without a fixed context, capable of transforming itself to adapt to anyone and anywhere. This is Italian firm noa*’s vision of a multifunctional space, translated into a sustainable model that is versatile for all situations. Among the infinite design possibilities, it was clear from the very beginning which direction to take—to design an architecture that is not indifferent to what happens inside it, a flexible space in which the community can decide, act and make its moves.

LEARNING FROM TANGRAM

The geometry of the project is based on an elementary form, the triangle, repeated modularly in both plan and elevation. In the first case, the triangular module is inscribed in a 3×3 m square, in the second in 3×1.5 m. Working with geometries that are easy to assemble allows the cultural centre to expand or contract according to the needs of the context. In addition, on an urban planning level, the triangles can combine into many types of shapes, resulting in different space typologies such as the slab, the courtyard or the punctiform village. Using the module in the façade opens up a variety of configurations, creating a kind of façade metamorphosis. The architects imagine the elevations as a chessboard, wherein some elements can be moved, with certain rules and in certain directions, the control being with the people who’ll experience the architecture. Doors can be moved, fanned out, turned on their hinges, lowered, raised, kept ajar… and the same goes for windows as well. A wide range of possibilities for an intuitive and playful architecture, made up of moves and countermoves, where the game of action and reaction is between community and building, gives life to the most diverse scenarios.

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PLAYERS ON THE PLAYGROUND

When defining the functional programme, the needs of a cultural and community centre were first investigated, as well as the ways to create an architecture as inclusive as possible. How do you design a space that works in the same way for children who meet to play, adults to watch an exhibition, and teenagers to attend a concert? What are the characteristics of a meeting space that is open all year round, that is not for consumption and that represents the public counterbalance to the private domestic dimension?

The natural answer to these questions was the decision to define different spaces capable of satisfying multiple needs, rather than specifying a fixed list of functions. Through six types of floor plans, ranging from 8 to 115 sq m, all the possible activities of the centre are accommodated. For example, the small module houses the artist’s atelier, the newspaper stall, the storeroom, the management office, the staircase, and the changing rooms. In the extra small module, you can find a ticket office. The medium module features the toilets, a library room, and the open-air bleachers, since not all modules stand for covered spaces. As the floor plans change to the larger size, the possibilities vary and culminate in the large space, with 115 sq m available for theatre and cinema.

THINK LOCAL, BE SUSTAINABLE

noa* wanted an architecture that is social in its final purpose, and sustainable in all the aspects of the design, including the choice of materials and construction techniques. For this prototype, natural materials and an exposed construction system were chosen, which would be easy to assemble and dismantle. In the “standard package”, the façade is made up of an exposed wooden structural system and a wall of clay bricks, alternating with transparent parts, which have also been modulated on the geometry of the triangle.

The sustainable approach must be central in the design, therefore, the final choice of materials must be verified with the project environment, to check their actual availability on-site, their thermal conductivity in relation to the climatic conditions, the energy consumption in their processing, and the presence of the necessary know-how skills. Similarly, a careful design of the installations can have a positive impact on the ecological footprint of the building. The centre for culture includes the use of green roofs and pergolas, photovoltaic systems, rainwater collecting systems, cross-ventilation systems as well as ponds and wooded areas for a temperate microclimate.

With this project, noa* envisages a flexible architecture, capable of reacting to changes in context, and at the same time, of working on different scales—from the macro-project to the street furniture. This cultural centre could be located on a beach, on a volcanic island, in the Scandinavian forests, on an abandoned lot in Detroit, or on the roofs of socialist housing in Berlin. It is an architecture that is able to mould itself to the morphological and climatic requirements of the context, while keeping intact the concept of sociality and interaction between the building and those who use it.

FACTFILE

Project: CeCuCo – Centre for Culture and Community

Architects: noa* network of architecture, Italy

Typology: Cultural Centre

Phase: Research project

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