Majagua, Santiago ArauPalimpsest Barragan poses a once in a lifetime opportunity to engage eye to eye with an architectural masterpiece of 20th century modernism by the Mexican architect Luis Barragan. As a hidden and still unknown architectural jewel set amidst a paradisiac jungle on the Pacific coast, the ruins of the never completed building have sunk into oblivion, not unlike the ancient Mexican pyramids, and are currently in progressive decay. The workshop will not only ‘unearth’ the project and at last put it on the map of architectural discourse, but it might even have a larger impact by kickstarting a debate around the preservation of its ruins from disintegration.
The workshop claims that any restoration or refurbishment of a building’s ruins with the attempt to conserve its originality and authenticity can only fail. It rather masquerades the ruins as a grotesque image of what they perhaps never had been. Instead, a building might survive time more gracefully by having its structure transformed into a layer of a whole new identity, by dissolving its ruins into a new building, by becoming part of an ‘architectural palimpsest’.
Agenda:
The summer school will take place on the actual site of the house's ruins in the jungle of Colima Beach with the Pacific Ocean in walking distance. The students will be based on site throughout the 10 days of the workshop. We will set camp in the jungle overlooking a private beach. Accommodation at the beach in tents (or alternatively in hotels nearby).
During the first three days we will analyse the ruins of the Colima Beach house with students examining and surveying the overgrown remains. The students will form teams and work closely with each other. A series of events, round table discussions and visits to nearby ancient ruins and built examples of other modernist projects by Barragan's contemporaries will accompany this analytical part of the workshop.
Over the following six days, and under the immediate impression of and in direct interaction with the ruins, the students will work on individual design proposals as a new palimpsest layer for the ruins. We will come together as a group for reviews, discussions and collective design sessions. Mexican and international experts and key figures of the architectural scene will visit us at the site and input on the students' work as guest critics.
On the final day we will set up an exhibition of the students’ works in the ruins, followed by a goodbye party.
There will be plenty of time to enjoy the beach, to swim in the ocean and to get inspired by the unique location set in the jungle.
After the workshop all student works will be digitally scanned and documented.
Prominent Features of the workshop/ skills developed
Applications for this program will open soon.
The workshop is open to current architecture, design, and art students, PhD candidates and young professionals. There are no Software requirements.
All participants travelling from abroad are responsible for securing any visa required, and are advised to contact their home embassy early. After full payment of course fees, the AA School can provide a letter confirming participation in the workshop.
Programme Heads
Ingrid Moye studied architecture at the Anáhuac University in Mexico City and at the ETSAM in Madrid. She has collaborated with SANAA in Tokyo, and with Herzog & de Meuron in Basel and London. Ingrid co-founded the interdisciplinary design studio Zeller & Moye with bases in Mexico City and Berlin in 2013. She has taught at the AA Visiting Schools in Mexico and at the Porto Academy. Her work has been awarded with the Fonca/Conaculta program.
Christoph Zeller studied architecture at the University of the Arts Berlin, and at the TU Berlin. He has collaborated with Herzog & de Meuron in Basel and London leading large scale projects before establishing the interdisciplinary design studio Zeller & Moye with bases in Mexico City and Berlin in 2013. Christoph has taught at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City and at the AA Visiting Schools in Mexico and Berlin.