1
1
O'Neil Ford duograph 3, Argentina : Altamira Building, 1998-2001, Rafael Iglesia, Florencia Raigal House, 2005-2006, Marcelo Villafañe / [editor, Wilfried Wang].
Title & Author:

O'Neil Ford duograph 3, Argentina : Altamira Building, 1998-2001, Rafael Iglesia, Florencia Raigal House, 2005-2006, Marcelo Villafañe / [editor, Wilfried Wang].

Edition:

1st ed.

Publication:

Austin : University of Texas at Austin, Center for American Architecture and Design ; Berlin : Ernst Wasmuth Verlag, [2010]

Description:

144 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 22 x 30 cm.

Series:

O'Neil Ford duograph series ; v. 3

Notes:
Altamira Building, Rosario -- Altamira / Wilfried Wang -- A propositional architecture / Federico Pastorino -- Altamira / Rafael Iglesia -- Florencia Raigal House, Rosario -- Roofs that know how to fly / Juan Manuel Rois -- Florencia Raigal House / Wilfried Wang -- Raigal House / Marcelo Villafañe.
Summary:

O'Neil Ford Duograph 3 - Argentina Altamira Building, Rafae! Iglesia, 1998-2001 Florencia Raigal House, Marcelo Villifane, 2005-2006.
The third O'Neil Ford Duograph presents a high-rise and a free-standing house, two common building types of contemporary architecture. These buildings are located in Rosario, Argentina's third largest city after the capital Buenos Aires and Cordoba, a city with a dense aggregation of high-rises in the downtown area, surrounded by the conventional suburban belt, which is now spreading deep into the Pampas.
The specific resolution of the two buildings is anything but typical. This Duograph offers close examinations, revealing the two buildings to be radical reinterpretations of their types. Marcelo Villafane's small house for Florencia Raigal integrates a spatial specificity--in continuation of the modernist free plan--with a parlante configuration: a house that comes to life with a distinct sculptural roof that happens to be hipped, but actually originates in the three-dimensional reanimation of an abstracted cow-hide, so typical and at the same time so distinctive of Argentina, a country of gauchos, asados & quinchos (cowboys, barbecues and grill pavillons).
With orthodox modernism's stricture on the use of pitched roofs and the subsequent loss of knowledge regarding the plastic-sculptural potential of a building, or more generally.
Modernism's fear of the figurative, few architects have tried to re-enter this domain of a configured architecture. In this small house Villafane shows in a wordless but built manifesto all his design control. Belying the house's casualness there is a compositional rigor which clearly surfaces upon close reading.
From a distance, Rafael Iglesia's high-rise building, Altamira (or high view), looks as if it is just another one of those late modernist towers. In fact, it radically breaks with the skeletal frame convention of orthodox high-rises. Iglesia's high-rise places the Miesian skyscrapers more closely in line with Sullivan's tripartite "tall office building" discourse than most modernists would be ready to accept. Iglesia is able to break from this convention because he has been interrogating both the nature of residences in general (and specifically for high-rises) as well as the structural consequences in particular.
The result of his studies is a cantilevering structure of unprecedented daring, in fact a double cantilever both in the horizontal as well as in the vertical sense. The strict control of the details, specifically the structural openings and the related line of glazing, serve to emphasize the brut quality of the concept, structure and materialization.
As with previous volumes in the O'Neil Ford Duograph series, the third volume presents one building by each of two different architects from a single country. By having two buildings featured within a single book, the series editors wish to let the architects and their work speak as directly as possible through the printed page. Drawings, sketches and photographs present each building in context and detail, providing a comprehensive account. --Book Jacket.

ISBN:

3803007194 (paperback)
9783803007193 (paperback)

Subject:

Iglesia, Rafael, 1952- Criticism and interpretation.
Villafañe, Marcelo, 1951- Criticism and interpretation.
Iglesia, Rafael, 1952-
Architecture Argentina 21st century.
Architecture Argentine 21e siècle.
Architecture.
Argentina.

Form/genre:

Criticism, interpretation, etc.

Added entries:

Wang, Wilfried.
O'Neil Ford duograph series ; v. 3.

O'Neil Ford duograph, Argentina
Altamira Building, 1998-2001
Florencia Raigal House, 2005-2006

Holdings:

Location: Library main 270917
Call No.: BIB 203847
Status: Available

Actions:
1
1

Sign up to get news from us

Email address
First name
Last name
By signing up you agree to receive our newsletter and communications about CCA activities. You can unsubscribe at any time. For more information, consult our privacy policy or contact us.

Thank you for signing up. You'll begin to receive emails from us shortly.

We’re not able to update your preferences at the moment. Please try again later.

You’ve already subscribed with this email address. If you’d like to subscribe with another, please try again.

This email was permanently deleted from our database. If you’d like to resubscribe with this email, please contact us

Please complete the form below to buy:
[Title of the book, authors]
ISBN: [ISBN of the book]
Price [Price of book]

First name
Last name
Address (line 1)
Address (line 2) (optional)
Postal code
City
Country
Province/state
Email address
Phone (day) (optional)
Notes

Thank you for placing an order. We will contact you shortly.

We’re not able to process your request at the moment. Please try again later.

Folder ()

Your folder is empty.

Email:
Subject:
Notes:
Please complete this form to make a request for consultation. A copy of this list will also be forwarded to you.

Your contact information
First name:
Last name:
Email:
Phone number:
Notes (optional):
We will contact you to set up an appointment. Please keep in mind that your consultation date will be based on the type of material you wish to study. To prepare your visit, we'll need:
  • — At least 2 weeks for primary sources (prints and drawings, photographs, archival documents, etc.)
  • — At least 48 hours for secondary sources (books, periodicals, vertical files, etc.)
...