Chapel and Meditation Room, Northern Portuguese Building, Modern Portuguese Church, Architecture Photos
Chapel and Meditation Room in Northern Portugal
18 Apr 2022
Architect: Studio Nicholas Burns
Location: Northern Portugal
Chapel and Meditation Room
Photos by Peter Bennetts
Chapel and Meditation Room, Portugal
“This knoll features several monumental boulders, spaced apart; and a fine stand of trees around them, with tall trunks and dense foliage. In the midst of the knoll, was a faint clearing; and this place presented itself as a `natural, `logical’ and `inevitable’ location or locus for the Chapel.
In the event, only two trees were lost and all boulders retained. The positioning of the Chapel implied itself in the voids and the interstices, as an in-between place: architecture as a clearing within a clearing.”
Michael Tawa
Could you talk to us a bit about the role of water within the designs, such as the proximity of the river, creeks, waterfalls and so on.
I see the water as an essential element of the design, part of the building fabric (the same as with the boulders and trees and topography). Symbolically it connects and cleanses – an unspoken ritual – and engages the sense connecting one to the place. The design allows the water to pause on its journey from deep underground on the way to the river and eventually the ocean.
Could you talk a bit about the material choices and their relationship to the boulders and other natural features of the site?
In parts, the boulders formed the formwork for the structure, the spaces in between the boulders and the trees informed the shape. The plasticity and monolithic characteristics of concrete was a natural selection. Local ardosia is used in parts with the intention that it formed part of the landscape and contrasted to the concrete form – more grounded versus light.
What about the role of light and shadow, and light as a building material?
The orientation of the building is designed around specific dates and times corresponding to important events of the client’s family. The idea is that time is marked over generations at these points forming very personal rituals. Deep shadows have the effect of drawing one into an abstract space whilst shafts of light connect to nature in a very direct way.
High openings give a sense of the sky and a feeling of floating upwards towards the light. In the meditation room the singular window frames the water, boulder and sky. Abstracting naturing and proving an intense view intensifying the connection. The depths of the shadows in the space dematerialises the room.
There is a strong ecclesiastical architectural tradition within the region. What was it like to work within this context? And what about the history of the reredos and its relationship to the architecture now housing it?
The intention of the project is to create a series of inward facing contemplative spaces without impacting on the historical buildings of the place as well as the natural context. The building is designed to be quiet and to disappear into the site; over time the vegetation will shroud the built forms, growing around, over and on the building.
A ruin. The reredos is framed in the space and contrasted by the space, the restoration was authentic in the sense that repairs where left on show, the fading and aged characters are allowed to speak and tell stories of the past. It is directly connected to a religion though housed in a way not to exclude other religions.
Chapel and Meditation Room, Portugal – Building Information
Architecture: Studio Nicholas Burns – www.nicholas-burns.com
Project size: 159 sqm
Completion date: 2020
Photographer: Peter Bennetts
Chapel and Meditation Room, Northern Portugal images / information received 160222 from Studio Nicholas Burns
Location: Northern Portugal, southwestern Europe
Portuguese Architecture
Portugal Architecture Design– chronological list
Porto Architecture Walking Tours by e-architect
Serralves House, Porto
Architect: João Vieira Campos
photo © Nelson Garrido
Serralves House in Porto
Foz Apartment Renovation, Foz do Douro, Porto
Architects: dEMM arquitectura
photo © José Campos Photography
Foz Apartment
Contemporary House in Falfosa, north of Faro
Design: AAP Associated Architects Partnership
photo : José Campos
Falfosa House, Faro
Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology, Lisbon, Belém
Design: AL_A
photo courtesy of architects
Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology in Lisbon
Comments / photos for the Chapel and Meditation Room – New Portuguese Architecture designed by Studio Nicholas Burns page welcome