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The City of Indigenous Arts

CAI 06 César Béjar

Details

Project Country: Mexico

Architect: Estudio MMX

Brickwork Contractor: El Puente

About the project

In the heart of Tepic (capital city of the State of Nayarit), where the Mololoa River and one of the city’s main roads converge, stands the “City for Indigenous Arts” (CAI for its acronym in Spanish). The complex materialises the multicultural identity of the region through architecture, landscape, mobility, and urban interventions.

Composed by 4 buildings, open spaces, and the intervention for the Mololoa River, the CAI gives place to gatherings, commerce, exhibition, and teaching of handicraft production techniques, while generates open areas for resting and leisure with new paving, lighting, urban furniture and extensive complementary vegetation.

More than a mere group of buildings, the CAI is an integral city project. At different scales, it contributes to urban life, inclusivity and to preserve, share and value the work and expressions of the territory’s original dwellers and people. The complex aims to be a place where cultures of the region can be appreciated and shared, while recovering a city space that used to be neglected and fragmented.

To intervene the site and restructure the public space, we resorted to the inspiring geometric understanding of patterns and traces of the original communities. The reinterpretation of these motifs and geometries allowed us to define the forms and spaces that would put the artisans and their work at the center.

Brick allowed us to connect geometrically with these motifs, as well as materially with the region. As a unit, brick let us face the design and construction of what seemed to be an intricate system, but is in fact the informed repetition of a simple action.

The project for the City of the Indigenous Arts takes brick to an urban scale, structuring a public space from the basic unit out. The craftsmanship of the building, echoes the activities that take place inside and around the complex.
The versatility of the brick allows for the creation of warm, welcoming, and dignified atmospheres for workshops, exhibitions, and artistic activities while on the exterior, its durability enable extensive-use and low-maintenance.

The earthly origin and qualities of the material, its energetic performance, the multiple possibilities for arrangement, and the efficiency of the brick for working structurally, are some of the reasons why we chose to work with it and what drives the complex’s unique geometry, composition and expression.
The brickwork for the City of Indigenous Arts is a testament and tribute to craftsmanship that transforms what used to be a detached site from the urban grid, into a community gathering place.