View Full Version : [Oporto] Leça da Palmeira Swimming Pool - Alvaro Siza


SWANK-E
08-07-2007, 23:57
Built at around the same time as the Boa Nova Tea House (1961-66) and located a short distance to the south, the Leça Swimming Pools complex is one of Siza's most visited works from the 1960s. The project is situated along the coastal avenue, the mass of the building set below the road level to allow an uninterrupted view to the sea. The program includes two swimming pools, changing facilities and a cafe.

Because of the need to limit construction costs and to preserve the landscape, the project had to make a minimal intrusion into the existing terrain. Since a topographical survey was not available at the time, the architect spent days marking the location of the existing rock formations, to arrive at a design which would require the least blasting.

The large adults' pool is bound by low concrete walls that extend into the sea and are complemented on three sides by the natural rock formations. The continuity of these walls with the existing topography and the level of the water in the pool which appears to be contiguous with the sea, create the illusion of a seamless transition between the man-made and natural. The children's pool, further inland, is enclosed by a curvilinear wall on one side and sheltered from the rest of the site by massive rocks and a concrete bridge at its entrance. In a playful gesture, this bridge is set just low enough to discourage adults from passing under it.

The access to the swimming pools is by way of a pedestrian ramp, which leads down from the coastal highway. The visitor descends gradually, simultaneously losing sight of the horizon, into a maze of concrete walls, platforms and canopies of the shower stalls and changing facilities building. After passing through its long corridors, partially screened by the cabinet partitions, a path along a high wall leads back into the Atlantic light, but the water still remains hidden from view. A subtle play on the senses, this element seems to slice the landscape in two, leaving only sky visible above and the sea audible beyond. The composition of these elements as building proper is understood only from the perspective of the swimming pools, since from the road they appear as an abstract figure, a series of carvings into the landscape.

Many of the materials of the swimming complex had already been used by Siza at Boa Nova and in other early projects, but here they achieve an unusual level of homogeneity: the rough concrete, of a slightly cooler hue than the rock formations, smooth and washable concrete panels for the pavement, Riga wood carpentry, and green copper roofs, which seen from the coastal avenue attain a color similar to the pools.

text from galinsky

How to get there:
Catch the blue line Metro to Senhor de Matosinhos. Then catch Bus 507 that will take you to the beach. Get off as soon as you see the beach and walk north for a 100m and you will see the building.

Opening times:
The pool complex is open everyday from 9am - 7pm

Entry fees:
Adults - Weekdays = 4€
Adults - Weekends = 5.50€

Children - Weekdays = 1.60€
Children - Weekends = 2.20€

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:00
The beach is located in between industrial areas but it's very popular and it's a long stretch

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:03
The extent of the building is not fully visible from above, only the copper roof and the concrete walls. You can also get a glimpse of the pools and the black timber from above. But I believe it is a big mistake to not go in and experience the change rooms and the pools.

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:04
ramp down to the entry and the booth where you pay to get in

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:06
the pools from the broadwalk above

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:07
entry to change rooms from above

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:08
entry space, looking at the change room entries and the entry ramp

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:11
The change rooms are raw, black, textured and with a strong smell of wood and the stickiness of caked on salt

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:12
my photos don't do the place justice.

the change rooms are in the centre with 2 doors, you go inside, get changed and move on through to the other side

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:14
.

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:16
the doors are below eye level and with the narrow slit, you can see through to the beach/pools, and just enough to let light in to bring out the texture in the black timber

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:18
after you move through to the other side, you can see wash tubs for washing yourself when you get back

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:19
here you can see one of the cubicles open

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:21
moving outside

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:21
looking back

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:22
further on

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:24
.

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:25
ok ok, we are finally outside

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:26
there are a couple of pools, and the rocks poke out between them, and the concrete platforms and walls dodge between them

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:28
levels

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:32
the pool, the beach and the walls

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:33
larger pool

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:35
the recreational pool. to get to it, you have to walk down the rocks

joHanneum Z
09-07-2007, 00:36
At the same time to this Leca de Palmeira swimming pool project(1961-66) Alvaro Siza had an other swimming pool project in the Park Quinta da Conceicao,Porto-Matosinhos too (1961-65).

As attchment: an "old view" of the Leca de Palmeira swimming pool.

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:36
courtyard

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:37
terrace, kiosk, and the way to the toilets

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:38
outside the toilets

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:39
inside the male toilets

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:41
through to the entry space again and the change rooms

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:44
looking back

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:45
one last... looking over the roof from the broadwalk level

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:46
oh, and the swimming shot (ok, i didn't swim, got there too late)
pity nowadays when you are swimming you only see the ugly building behind.

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 00:48
look the other way instead

that's all folks..

primocordara
09-07-2007, 01:19
Here you can download a sketchup model (http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mid=14dc16610b43f9d89dc802659e314958&prevstart=0.)

takesh h
09-07-2007, 01:26
Always wanted to see the interior space of this. Thank you.
Details and forms are strongly influenced by Aalto, but planning and sequential spaces are definitely Siza's.
I wonder how they maintain the building but it is surprising to see wood and concrete in such a good condition after more than 40 years by the sea.
What kind of wood is that, does anybody know? vOid?

takesh h
09-07-2007, 01:29
Here you can download a sketchup model (http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mid=14dc16610b43f9d89dc802659e314958&prevstart=0.)
Is it just me? The link to download is broken at 3D warehouse.
There seems to be no model uploaded. :confused:

primocordara
09-07-2007, 01:42
weird, I just downloaded it, here it is anyway...

el-capitano
09-07-2007, 01:53
I'm hoping that it was fairly empty when you went otherwise I wouldve felt awkward taking pictures inside a change room! :)

vOid
09-07-2007, 02:51
Fabulous pictures and report, Kevin! Last time I saw this I was still a student and it was in a much worse condition. I'm glad to see it has been repaired with full respect to the original design.
This is a wonderful architectural work, especially if you consider when and where it was built and who designed it - in the 1960s, in a very closed and conservative country being ruled by a dictator, by a young Siza in his late 20s.
A teacher of mine used to say that the most powerful of Siza's designs were his early ones. Although I don't totally agree, I think this and some of his other early works are still remarkable and show us what architecture is all about in this overly "graphic" times we live in.
:not worth

@ Takesh: sadly I don't know what kind of wood it is. However, the wood has a dark varnish, that's not its natural tone.

gorgon
09-07-2007, 06:42
Fantastic. I was going to say the same thing about the condition of the concrete but it's been restored? anyone got any more info of how this was done? I would also love to knwo the wood, it looks very Japanese.

Also Kevin why are there hardly any people there? Is it just not used so much now?

SWANK-E
09-07-2007, 08:23
I got there at 6.30pm and they lady at the door thought i was crazy that i would want to pay 5.50€ to go in there when it's about to shut

I have to agree with your lecturer vOid, that the earlier work by Siza, especially this pool, is his most powerful. It engages with all senses and interacts with the landscape in an amazing way. His later works and recent works are good, but they seem to be more visually driven, especially his latest pool project in Barcelona (which I will also post). I guess it's much like Mies van der Rohe, his earlier works such as the Barcelona Pavilion and the Tugendhat House IMHO.

Ross Millaney
09-07-2007, 15:00
Did u make it to the tea house too?!Incredible no?!we visited these buildings on a stormy day and the view from the bar was amazing...however the swimming pool was drowned by the waves and we had to hop the wall to get into the site because it was closed! :P

mjl
19-08-2007, 02:43
Details and forms are strongly influenced by Aalto, but planning and sequential spaces are definitely Siza's.


I never really thought of Aalto when I saw this in person, but I can see that now, in retrospect... To me, it appeared more derivative of Scarpa's work, materials, forms, planning and all.

It is a beautiful place, even if just for a walk through during winter.

jedisalf
20-08-2007, 16:14
yeah, good project indeed.

However I wouldnt put 1 foot inside those restrooms.

I dont think poured concrete is a good idea for a public restroom.

SWANK-E
20-08-2007, 16:16
yeah, good project indeed.

However I wouldnt put 1 foot inside those restrooms.

I dont think poured concrete is a good idea for a public restroom.

why?

arv
29-08-2007, 13:50
As always , very well documented , thanks .:not worth

jedisalf
29-08-2007, 16:15
why?

Its a bacteria haven!