Posted inProjects

Desvio, creative work space by João Gonçalo Lopes

"The architects saw the working pods as open structures to be contaminated by their occupants. According to the different personal characters of each occupier and different moments, the pods would be able to be more or less open."

The initial brief was to convert an old car workshop with 167sqm, into a collective work and event space for art-related professionals. The work involved the conception, coordination and construction of the interior elements like wood structures, furniture and lighting.

© João Matos
© João Matos

With big openable entrance gates, the space had the potential to become part of the street while bringing the street life in. The project layout is based on a set of different courtyards, with different characters, around which the working pods are organized.

© João Matos
© João Matos

This layout was made thinking of the gradations from public to private and the different events that can happen in each place. It also aims to explore the full volume of the space by adding a new level while keeping the openness and the flow of the overall space.

© João Matos
© João Matos

From the beginning, the project aimed to introduce old materials and explore possibilities of reuse. After the schematic design, the design team set up to collect and inventory old parts from demolitions that were then used to shape and hack the basic spatial scheme.

© Inês Costa Monteiro
© Inês Costa Monteiro

Together with the potted plants, the material pallet generates a sense of an exterior environment as if extending from the street, where the pods become the small interior universes within this “outdoor” space like in a small neighbourhood.

© Inês Costa Monteiro
© Inês Costa Monteiro

The architects saw the working pods as open structures to be contaminated by their occupants. According to the different personal characters of each occupier and different moments, the pods would be able to be more or less open. This generates very diverse and dynamic gradations of permeability within the same frame.

© João Gonçalo Lopes
© João Gonçalo Lopes

Through the experience of building it themselves, the designers were able to tune each element to its final position, allowing them to think closer to the body scale. It became a very close and attentive process where each material and detail could be brought to its full potential. This attention to the combination of materials allowed them to create different ambients and microcosmos for each working area within the overall space.

© Inês Costa Monteiro
© Inês Costa Monteiro