EUNOIA
Beautiful thinking
Eunoia [yoo-noy-uh] Greek
A pure and well-balanced mind, a good spirit.
‘Slowing down, experiencing, and thinking’ are the parts of the methodology that is accepted and embraced while recreating the faded-green Nuestro Park, located in the hot-arid climatic conditions of Phoenix, Arizona. When Nuestro Park and its surroundings are analyzed, apart from the plenty of open areas, mostly reserved for housing, it is found out that the region is full of junkyards, related with the car rentals and related repair shops, serving all to the airport at a short distance. Another distinct data found out is the existence of many worship places of different religions scattered in the region.
Although the project area is located nearby downtown Phoenix, the neighborhood of the project area carries low-density suburban characteristics in a grid-iron plan in rectangular building blocks, with dispersed, mostly single-story individual residential buildings in their gardens, lacking an urban focal point to bring the inhabitants together. The project area has a character that does not have much attraction power with any reference related to the environment, vegetation, or topography.
While implementing the requirements of the project, the approach of creating an environment that would fulfill the users' both physical and mental needs (200 visitors daily) is preferred. The main intention is to provide a linear route experience where individuals can reach their inner cores, be alone with their thoughts, and disconnect from the rest of the world, but in a way unifying the inhabitants of the neighborhood in this new focal point. The design of the project is aimed to give the visitor the opportunity to experience it with his/her body, as it is thought that spiritual experiences.
To blend the project requirements with the new perspective brought, three phases are formulated and designed where the experiences and the activities will differentiate from each other. Phase I is an answer for the commercial requirements of the area as an attraction point for the neighborhood at a sunken plaza. Phase II is the first step of separation from the outer world where the underground art studios are located. Phase III (or the Eunoia) is to meet people’s spiritual needs, as a subterranean space at the end of the aimed narrative where they can both experience, relax and later reconnect with the nature above in the reorganized/redesigned Nuestro Park. By the way, as the hot-arid climatic conditions are challenging to keep a park green, more appropriate climate-friendly landscape options are searched and proposed. Thus, the project will add vitality to both the city and the region offering a different spiritual experience to both the local inhabitants and the visitors of the area. Depending on the junkyards of rental cars in the region, it is believed to be decent and appropriate to use scrap materials at the interior installations, upper structures, and façade elements recycling and upcycling them. In addition, one of the studios is proposed to be an artisanal workshop using these scrap metals in and around the project area with the intent to decrease the environmental pollution in the district. Although the proximity of the project area to the airport and the presence of scrap materials cause pollution in various ways, it is believed that sustainability can still be achieved for the city and the district.
Popular Articles
Popular articles from the community
Fausto Terán and Toro Fuse Japanese Craft with Mexican Tradition in a Lakeside Retreat
Nakamura House pairs Shou-Sugi-Ban charred pine with handmade clay tile at the foot of Atlangatepec Lagoon in Mexico.
HCCH Studio Wraps a Shanghai High-Rise Office in Curved Walls of Translucent Glass
A 1,000 square meter fit-out in Lujiazui replaces the typical tech-office palette with layered glass, micro-cement, and quiet rigor.
YOAP Architects Round a Corner in Yeongcheon with a Cylindrical Community Hub
A 197-square-meter brick and ribbed-clad tower turns a forgotten alley corner in South Korea into a public garden with a low threshold.
Rojkind Arquitectos and Think Parametric Build a Glueless Pavilion from 67 Interlocking Panels
A serpentine fiber-cement installation in Chapultepec Park celebrates a decade of architectural media in Mexico City.
Similar Reads
You might also enjoy these articles
317studio Turns an 87 m² Classroom into a Forest Clearing for Scouts in New Taipei City
A rope canopy, student-made specimens, and campfire geometry replace rows of desks in this Scouting classroom in Xizhi District.
24 7 Arquitetura Builds a Timber Pavilion as a Family's First Act on a 5,000 m² Brazilian Plot
In Jaguariúna, a prefabricated glulam house nestles among mature trees as the opening move of a larger residential masterplan.
1+1>2 Architects Build a School from 900 Blocks of Hmong Stone on Vietnam's Rocky Plateau
On a barren valley in Ha Giang province, a community quarried its own stone to raise a kindergarten and primary school rooted in Hmong identity.
100A Associates Builds a Volcanic Stone Retreat on Jeju Island Rooted in Ritual and Restraint
Watarstay [Wa:Tar] in Bongseong-ri channels Jeju's basalt, reed, and hemp into a 150 m² hospitality space shaped by contemplation.
Explore Urban Design Competitions
Discover active competitions in this discipline
The Global Benchmark for Architecture Dissertation Awards
Design challenge to reuse E-waste
Comments (0)
Please login or sign up to add comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!