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Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Latvia Architecture News - Mar 24, 2017 - 18:17   16445 views

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Bee Breeders Architecture Competitions has announced winners for the Blue Clay Country Spa competition. Judges have selected the winners of the Blue Clay Country Spa architecture competition, in which students and professionals were invited to contemplate the economic, cultural and architectural implications of inhabiting non-urban territory, through an ecotourist facility in Latvia. 

The winning submissions were chosen as they established social collectivity through circulation and parti. The first prize winners were Joao Varela, Ana Isabel Santos, Joao Tavares, Paulo Dias from Portugal, who successfully reprogrammed a spatial archetype, the hortus conclusus, or walled garden. The project’s circular promenade unites each functional space of the spa, enclosed within a colonnade that functions both as wall and social space. With an ethos of minimal interference and simplicity, this hortus conclusus pursues a new type of ecotourism, one in which the spatial diagram of the spa enables a new environmental, cultural, and social agency.

Winners of the second prize were Graham Burn, Alex Turner, and Will Fisher from a UK company called Pug, and the third place winning entry came from Miroslava Brooks and Amy DeDonato from the US. Pug were chosen for their strong response to the site, with a playful reinterpretation of vernacular form. The strength of Miroslava’s and Amy’s project lies in its combination of three architecture typologies, the courtyard, pavilion, and promenade, to generate a spa experience that is simultaneously containing and exposing.

Federico Rodriguez and Alejandro Lobo from the University - Facultad de Arquitectura Diseno y Urbanismo - UdelaR in Uruguay received the BB Student Award, while Ashley Clayton and Mangyuan Wang from the UK won the BB Green Award for their sustainable design entry.

See the winning projects with jury comments below:

1st prize winners: Blue Clay Country Spa by João Varela, Ana Isabel Santos, João Tavares, Paulo Dias

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

The first place entry for the Blue Clay Country Spa is successful in its reprogramming of a spatial archetype, the hortus conclusus, or walled garden. The primary gesture of the project is a circular promenade that unites each functional space of the spa. The wall circumscribes an interior garden and orchard, enclosing the spa with a colonnade that functions both as wall and social space. 

This formal armature of the circle allows each room of the spa - sauna, public bath, and guest house - to individually reflect its unique programmatic demands without detracting from the unifying identity of the project. Each space, simply detailed with native woods and exposed structure, fulfills the particular programmatic requirements of water, heat, light, privacy, and views. This circular space of ambulation marks the territory of the spa while still retaining the trace of the clearing in the forest, perpetuating the memory of Baltic vernacular architecture. With an ethos of minimal interference and simplicity, this hortus conclusus pursues a new type of ecotourism, one in which the spatial diagram of the spa enables a new environmental, cultural, and social agency.

1st prize winners interview

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

2nd prize winners: A House for Janis by Graham Burn, Alex Turner, Will Fisher/PUG

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

The success of the second place proposal for the Blue Clay Country Spa competition lies in its strong response to the site and its playful reinterpretation of vernacular form. The project consists of a primary linear structure: a thatched roof longhouse spanning from the forest edge to the lake and rooted in the traditional Kurzeme typology typical of the region. A second linear element - a strip of productive landscape containing gardens, outdoor dining, a pool, and other ecological services - intersects the longhouse at an angle and divides the site into disparate quadrants. 

Within the structure, a series of whimsical follies contain the program and the remaining space is effectively open to the outdoors, creating a blurred threshold between landscape and interior. This linear parti, combined with the calculated rhythm of enclosed elements, define an interior procession from the forest to the lake, while the porosity of the structure allows for visitors to filter into the landscape. The strength of the linear strategy is further emphasized by the scale of the traditional thatched roof, forming a long opaque bar against the backdrop of trees, isolating the separated landscape spaces and creating peaceful, intimate realms while allowing permeation through the building and its inner world.

2nd prize winners interview

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

3rd prize winners: Reflection in the Garden by Miroslava Brooks, Amy DeDonato/AMOA

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

The strength of the third place entry lies in its combination of three architecture typologies, the courtyard, pavilion, and promenade, to generate a spa experience that is simultaneously containing and exposing. The project employs a circular promenade to create a defined perimeter within an expansive, rural site. The rigid perimeter is strategically broken down by the program contained within, creating a surprisingly outwardly engaging experience. The interior program of the spa is organized around a central gathering courtyard. 

The courtyard extends and crosses the perimeter promenade to create and define the building entry. The major circulation corridors pinwheel off from the central courtyard extending past the promenade to the landscape breaking down the program into isolated structures. Each structure contains a key programmatic element that is separated as a pavilion within a carved out courtyard. The pavilions take on distinct architectural forms defining unique spatial experiences for the programs they house. The small pavilion courts directly engage the perimeter promenade focusing the user to the exterior of the site while inviting the wanderer to simultaneously look in. The project creates a closed loop of retrospection allowing the visitor to reflect outwardly to the landscape while inhabiting each individual spa space, simultaneously reflecting back inwardly while wandering the exterior promenade.

3rd prize winners interview

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

BB Student Award: Boxes! by Federico Rodriguez, Alejandro Lobo/UdelaR  

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

BB Green Award: Blue Clay Country Spa - Garden Spa by Ashley Clayton, Mangyuan Wang

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

Winners announced for Blue Clay Country Spa competition

The competition also selected 6 Honorable Mentions, which are all can be seen in the competition website. 

World Architecture Community is Media Partner for Bee Breeders Architecture Competitions. Bee Breeders Architecture Competitions are still receiving registrations for Hong Kong Pixel Homes Architecture Competition, Mango Vinyl Hub Architecture Competition In Latvia and Stone Barn Meditation Camp Architecture Competition

All images courtesy of Bee Breeders Architecture Competitions

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