Pinar Cengiz
About
Pinar is from Istanbul and has been living in the UK since her undergraduate degree at University of Bath. Before joining RCA she has worked at Squire & Partners on renovation and reuse projects involving Grade II listed buildings.
Having lived in big cities, she has been interested in the energy and the changing nature of the urban realm from early on in her studies. Her work has been influenced by the wider economical, social, environmental and political consequences of architecture.
Statement
The project starts from two reference images chosen from the ADS5 Atlas which are analysed and read intuitively. Initial explorations develop and translate into a building design, taking form in a transparent flexible envelope built within a solid repeating structure. The research questions how the contrasts of solidity vs. transparency and repetition vs. flexibility can work together.
The recess on the exterior facade creates a loggia together with an upstand and a downstand, generating a protected area. The horizontal facade elements are mirrored and keep the plane of symmetry at eye-level. The view is framed and the eyes are delivered into the horizon.
Overview
Although we think of bathing and exercise as private activities, the public bath, or hammam, was a vital social institution in the Middle East for centuries before the advent of modern plumbing. The baths played a central role in promoting hygiene and public health but they also served as meeting places where people could relax and socialise, creating a culture that brings people together. Whereas today, we are more drawn to go to gyms or spas in the middle of the city formed within existing buildings which are most of the time enclosed, poorly ventilated and individualistic in nature. On the contrary to what we have conformed to in the 21st century, the project aims to use sports culture as a public condenser and focuses on creating interactions in the community within an open atmosphere which also relates to the landscape.
Journey to Interior
Sports Culture as Public Condenser
Connection to Exterior
Flexibility within Repetition
Universal Campus
Day in the Life
The structure is essentially occupied freely within the grid. Being almost like a vertical city, there is a choice to move around and engage in activities as one desires and the chance of encountering people in that journey. Overall, the scheme provides an infrastructure with different levels of enclosure. It aims to enhance a social culture of sports and promotes interactions between people by creating a public condenser in the campus.