Viña Campesino, María Pinto, Chile

San Francisco Chapel by PARALELA

The following description is courtesy of PARALELA and translated by Emma Johansson from Archdaily.

San Francisco Chapel

Within the framework of the Capilla País project, during the first weeks of the summer of 2019, more than 500 university volunteers traveled to different locations in Chile to build 15 chapels to provide meeting and prayer spaces for people in small and vulnerable communities in the country, where people practice their faith collectively, simply and honestly, far from the institutional crisis of the church and its hierarchies. The proposed and executed project is based on the following design principles:

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Symbolic Character: A structure clearly recognizable as a chapel, encouraging prayer as well as the realization of social activities. Using the most elementary image of a church, based on a symmetrical structure with a gable roof.

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Constructive Simplicity: A chapel that is built entirely by university volunteers, without difficulties and within the available time frame, based on in-situ prefabrication processes and simultaneous assembly. 

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Use of Materials: A chapel that allows an excellent performance of its components, both to maximize the use of economic resources as well as to minimize material loss and loss of time.

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Indirect Lighting: A chapel that takes advantage of sunlight to indirectly illuminate the perimeter of the structure, with the possibility of also installing artificial lighting, providing an atmosphere of prayer.

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Versatility and Expansion: A chapel with a basic design that allows simple variations and enlargements, depending on the requirements and capabilities of the communities.

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Conditioning: A chapel that allows achieving better thermal conditioning with simple subsequent interventions that the community can execute within the wall thickness generated by the structure.

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA
Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

A rigid gable frame is the most essential unit of the chapel. The repetition of this frame forms a base module determined by the length of a standard plate. The thickness of the pillars and composite trusses allow variations in the installation of coatings, generating various types of additional modules (atrium, doors, finishing, among other possibilities), with multiple possible combinations allowing, on one hand, to adapt the chapel to different geographical conditions and locations, and on the other hand, facilitate its subsequent expansion, without sacrificing the distinctive character of the proposal.

Photography by Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Project Details

Project name: San Francisco Chapel

Architecture studio: PARALELA 

Website: www.paralela.cl

Contact email: jdigirolamo@paralela.cl

End year: 2019

Built area: 95 m2

Project location: Viña Campesino, María Pinto, Chile

https://goo.gl/maps/Ti9KhYwzJRmkknWAA Photographer: Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Photographer: Nico Saieh + PARALELA

Project Credits

Architects: José di Girolamo, Raimundo Salgado, David Meza, Martín Correa, Trinidad Amenábar, José Manuel Arteaga (Architecture student)

Building consultants: Martín Hurtado (Architect), Mario Wagner (Structural Engineer)

Building supervisors: Fernando Ulloa (Civil Construction Student), Cristóbal Claro (Architecture student)

Builder: Volunteer students from different universities and careers

Client: Capilla País Project from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

Cost: Less than USD 7.500 (floor structure uncounted)

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