Tirado Arquitectos completes timber-clad museum at colonial farm in Patagonia

The ridged roofline of this museum in Chile‘s Aysén Region references existing historic buildings on the site and creates a sequence of dramatic internal spaces with steeply sloping ceilings.

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

Santiago-based studio Tirado Arquitectos was commissioned by the regional government to develop a museum on the historically important site, where settlers established a sheep-farming community in the early 20th century.

The community grew into the city of Cohaique, which is now the capital of the Aysén Region and the gateway to some of Patagonia’s most remote areas.

The historical significance of the site, and its remaining original buildings meant that an important focus of the project was the preservation and repurposing of these simple wood and stone structures.

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

The studio headed by architect Cristóbal Tirado also sought to ensure that new interventions are in keeping with the existing hierarchy of the built structures on the 2.6-hectare plot, as well as their relationship to the natural setting.

The first stage of the project focused on returning the site to its original state by clearing away any incongruous later additions and reinstating the historic site plan, with buildings arranged along either side of an old road.

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

“The intervention seeks first to restore and consolidate the structure of the buildings,” the architects explained, “deleting all kinds of historical mistakes that damage the original condition of them, trying at the same time to preserve the value of the evolution of the constructions.”

The new building was designed to house the largest of the museum’s exhibition spaces and is intended to sit inconspicuously within its heritage context.

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

The elongated structure occupies the site of several derelict farm buildings that were demolished due to their poor condition. Its massing references these predecessors, as well as the proportions of the preserved workers kitchen.

The building is constructed as a single monolithic volume featuring a roof with varying pitched sections that are directly informed by the angles of the other heritage structures on the site.

“The facade is formed as the succession of farm houses and their roofs,” the studio added. “The volume recedes in areas where trees exist or there are proposed patios and opens on the ends to enhance its relationship with the labourers kitchen and the landscape.”

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

The timber-clad volume rests on a continuous concrete plinth and is wrapped in batons of lenga wood, which is native to the southern Andes range and will gradually weather to help the building blend in with the surrounding nature.

The same wood is used to create a consistent flooring surface throughout the building’s interior, which is arranged as a linear sequence of interconnected rooms featuring uniform white walls and ceilings.

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

The various rooms are given a unique quality by the dramatically different roof forms. The varying pitch of the ceilings determines the character of the different exhibition spaces, which are joined by a reception area and an auditorium.

Glazed partitions used to separate the rooms feature metal frames with staggered vertical elements. The glass surfaces provide a visual connection with the adjacent patios and courtyards whilst allowing daylight to flood into the exhibition spaces.

Museo Regional Aysen by Tirado Arquitectos

As part of the project, the team developed a proposal for the landscaping around the new and existing structures that seeks to restore and consolidate the historic properties of the site.

Groves of trees and fruit farms will be preserved and maintained, while different grasses have been sown to separate the park from the old road. Trees will also be planted to enhance the separation of the museum and the park from the nearby city.

Photography is by Cristóbal Palma.


Project credits:

Technical unit: Regional Direction of Architecture MOP Región de Aysén
Architects: Cristóbal Tirado, Silvia Barbera, Jorge Batesteza
Project manager: Cristóbal Tirado
Collaborators: JT.Rodríguez (team leader), JP.Larraín, I.Balart, F.Torreblanca, JC.Barros, S.Cruz
Specialities: P.Larraín (restoration), E.Zegers (calculus), Cobe Ing (sanitary), Cobe Ing (electric), Termovac (climate), DLLD (lighting), Landscape MPB (landscaping), I.Balart (furniture and signage), Contacus (acoustics)
Construction: LYD Construction

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