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Nestlé Application Group, Mexico Building, Project, News, Design, Image, Property
Nestlé Application Group Mexico : Information
Mexican Project by Michel Rojkind Arquitectos in Queretaro
Nestlé Application Group, Queretaro, Mexico
2009
Michel Rojkind Arquitectos
Photos © Paúl Rivera/archphoto.com

In his "Atlantida de hormigón", Reyner Banham posits
"a casual connection, conscious and cultural, between modern
architecture and industrial utilitarian structures of an industrial
epoch. From Loos and Berhens to Gropius and Le Corbusier among others,
in the beginning of the 20th century, a constant back and forth was
established between architecture and industrial construction - up
until this time marginalized in Architecture - that would continue
to be a characteristic of contemporary architecture. To reinvent the
industrial world was a task with which architecture had paid back
the favor of having been shown the path as to how to disengage of
the heavy formal and stylistically weight of almost two centuries
of vacuous rhetoric and ecclesiastic academicism. To reinvent, is
understood, as the invention of an image which moves between the operative
logic and the logotype.

Between this, lays the work that Rojkind arquitectos has done for
a pair of factory additions for the Nestlé Company. The first
commission consists of a vestibule for one of its chocolate factories
in the outskirts of Toluca, near Mexico City; it is a structure of
sloped plains attached to the existing factory that will serve as
the central core for a future museum. The second commission located
in Queretaro's industrial zone, is a laboratory for development of
new products, packaging center and a satellite office for its product
technology center located in Maryville which focuses on the development
of new drinking products.

This latter commission presented an additional challenge besides its
relationship with the existing facility. The UNESCO's designation
of Queretaro's historic city center as a world heritage site in 1996,
had unforeseen consequences that even expanded to the city's industrial
periphery. As a result of this designation, the new building was to
have an arched porch, as rooted in tradition. Rojkind responded to
this challenge with a reinterpretation not only of the arch but also
of the porch. If the arch is nothing else than a fragment of a cupola,
in the same vein, the cupola is an amplified arch when it rotates
around its own axis, the cupola meets the reference criteria of the
arch without turning it into a cliché. In this case, a series
of spheres intersect and multiply like foam forming the origin of
a continuous open space; a portico. This space expands while another
one, made of orthogonal boxes clad in satin mirrored glass, restrains
the proliferation of the spheres and houses the specific program requirements
for the lab.

While the exterior is opaque, metallic and impenetrable in appearance,
the interior of these boxes painted in different colors, have an almost
theatrical quality to them: it appears as if the researchers wearing
their white robes were floating in a continuous flow of blues, yellows
or greens which are interrupted by the continuous space of different
colors Sometimes, when one of the of the metal panels that covers
the boxes reveals itself and opens like a window, they can be seen
from the outside.

The construction of these buildings (if built in a different latitude,
a more sophisticated technology most likely would have had been employed
to automatize the production of the unique geometries of these spheres)
implied the translation of spatial forms was to be done in a different
constructive manner, in a simple almost colloquial way, which allowed
the local workers to fabricate the foam like spherical space from
the physical intersection of the spherical cupolas made of rebar rings
and arches.

The final result is a series of contrasts that has been unified with
apparent simplicity: the exterior metallic slightly reflective satin
color lightly contrasts with and against the bright and satin colors
of the interiors, the sloped abstracted planes of the boxes contrast
against the exuberance of the interweaving spheres. The strength of
this project might be attributed to this game of contrasting opposites,
which in a dynamic and changing way depending from the physical view
of the observer, can be a dominant characteristic in a moment or a
discrete characteristic in another. A rethought and recharged industrial
construction thus regains an understanding of what at one time it
offered to Architecture: clarity and force.
Alejandro Hernández
Nestlé Application Group Mexico images / information from
Michel Rojkind Arquitectos

Nestlé Application Group Mexico - Building Information
CONSTRUCTION: 700 sqm
PROGRAM: Laboratories, Offices, Auditorium, Tasting area
CLIENT: NESTLÉ
DESIGN YEAR: 2007
DATE OF COMPLETION: 2009
ARCHITECTURAL PROJECT: ROJKIND ARQUITECTOS
PRICIPAL IN CHARGE: MICHEL ROJKIND
PROJECT LEADERS: AGUSTÍN PEREYRA, PAULINA GOYCOOLEA
PROJECT TEAM: JUAN CARLOS VIDALS (3D MASSING), MORITZ MELCHERT, TERE
LEVY, ISAAC SMEKE JABER, TOMAS KRISTOF, FRANCISCO GORDILLO, ANDRÉS
ALTESOR, JUAN PABLO ESPINOSA
LANDSCAPE: ROJKIND ARQUITECTOS
FACADE ENGINEERING: VYCISA [JUAN PABLO CASILLAS, CYBELLE HERNÁNDEZ.]
STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: JUAN FELIPE HEREDIA
M.E.P.: QUANTUM DESIGN
NESTLÉ SUPERVISION: FLAVIO GUERRERO, CRISTIAN MORENO
CONSTRUCTION: SLCI ENGINEER JOSÉ SOLIS
FURNITURE: ESRAWE DISEÑO / ARNE QUINZE / PM STEELE
CARPETS: INTERFACE
Photos © Paúl Rivera/archphoto.com
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Comments / photos for the Nestlé Application Group Mexico Architecture
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Nestlé Application Group Building :
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