View Full Version : [Bogota] "Porciuncula De La Milagrosa" - Daniel Bonilla


primocordara
25-09-2005, 14:45
"PORCIUNCULA DE LA MILAGROSA" CHAPEL
Arch. Daniel Bonilla
Colab. Archs. Akira Kita, Ana Lucia Cano

Location: La Calera, Bogota, Colombia
Built area: 100m2
Built: 2003-2004
The new building is on a hillside meadow in the forest; the chapel is in effect perched on a grassy platform that looks through a frieze of trees to magnificent views. Coming up the slope, you arrive at a wall made of thin flat slabs of dark local stone. In a slot in the wall is the brass church bell and through the slot is the southern courtyard of the church (what Bonilla calls the ‘confession patio’). The southern wall of the church on the other side of the court is of glass shaded by a pattern of closely-spaced thin timber slats. Entering the church, the point of the slats is immediately apparent: light is filtered and striated and, as the sun moves, it transforms the whole space with slowly changing streaks and sheets of luminance, sometimes stained by the panels of blue and yellow glass incorporated in the skin. Further modification can be achieved by opening the shutter-like panels that carry an inner layer of slats.

The altar is at the north end of the plan, enclosed by planes of stone at each side, which are made like the bell wall of the courtyard. Behind the altar is a further wall that is cut by a vertical slot that reveals the tall dark stone volume of the tabernacle. Gloom is relieved by a long horizontal slot in the north wall and, from the nave, vertical and horizontal slots define a magic rectangle through which the forest can be seen – God’s creation is brought right into the middle of humanity’s. All this is fairly conventional, if finely honed, but the chapel is capable of remarkable transformations. The whole glass, steel and timber nave can be slid back over the southern patio to the wall with the bell in it. This almost doubles the capacity of the nave and creates two large openings, east and west, that
reveal meadow and forest. At the same time, the ceiling of the box, like its sides, is shown to be glass and slats, providing another dimension of striated light. On festival days, the opened chapel can adopt yet another configuration. A congregation can assemble outside on the sloping meadow to the west of the building, sitting either on chairs or on the ground to see proceedings at the altar, which on such occasions is moved from its normal position and placed between the openings in the walls created by moving the nave, which becomes a kind of transept. (All furniture is light but strong, so that it can be moved readily to change configurations.) The external congregation on these occasions sees the altar in front of the eastern tree frieze that defines a notional space that is both open and partly enclosed.

From:
http://www.dexigner.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=661

more detailed pictures of this chapel (although text is in Spanish)
http://www.arqa.com/informacion.cfm/n.6286.cfm

Another interesting projects by him:

http://www.archphoto.it/IMAGES/bonilla/bonilla.htm

primocordara
25-09-2005, 14:47
other views

primocordara
25-09-2005, 14:48
plans sections

primocordara
25-09-2005, 14:49
Architects Sketch and interior views

primocordara
25-09-2005, 14:50
Here a road map. You should get a bus to the La CALERA road. Its a small comunity to the east of Bogota. kmz are very low res.

imasayer
26-09-2005, 18:45
I really love that first project. The materials have such a nice contrast. Thanks for the post!

primocordara
26-09-2005, 19:22
Thanks! Don't forget to check the links I provide, there are details of the sliding partitions and much better pictures.


There is also a link to a previous chapel by Arch. Daniel Bonilla, coincidentally called "Los Robles" (like the second one of this thread by 57STUDIO!) very worth seeing too!

arv
26-09-2005, 21:49
Excellent job Primo. Thanks.

sigue2000
27-09-2005, 00:31
Thanks Primo. :clap: Very nice projects. No problem with the scans on my side.
Sorry i have the same rep problem. I have to spread some love around first.

danbush
27-09-2005, 11:39
Very nice: What is the grey striated wall material behind the alter?

primocordara
27-09-2005, 12:37
Very nice: What is the grey striated wall material behind the alter?
That is stone layered in horizontal stripes, taken from the place.
I don't know the name in English, but its the one that comes "flat".
Check out this lintel, how do they hold his stone there?!

Mounib
27-09-2005, 13:48
Nice projects primo, thanks for posting that and the link too.

jedisalf
28-09-2005, 16:40
That is stone layered in horizontal stripes, taken from the place.
I don't know the name in English, but its the one that comes "flat".
Check out this lintel, how do they hold his stone there?!

could be granite, just in its raw form, and put together sideways.

primocordara
28-09-2005, 17:24
could be granite, just in its raw form, and put together sideways.

"...thin flat slabs of dark local stone..." I don't think it's granite. It is the one that comes in slices from the quarry, seldom used for floors in the 50's.

mimilapin
08-11-2005, 23:44
primo
I love that first project , beautiful

trogers
08-11-2005, 23:55
Sorry if this sometimes means poor scaned pictures!

Don't apologize...many thanks to your continued contributions!

tr

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:26
Hi! Rummaging inside my Iphoto library I found some images of this chapel, from a trip to Bogota some time ago...
Photos taken in 2004
Camera: Leica D2
Extra project Info: The client financed the project with a received estate (inheritance). At the time of the visit, mass was organized every week and it was open to the public.

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:29
OPPS forgot the images!

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:29
Close to the facade

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:31
Again, the exterior

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:32
Interior

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:33
Pulpit of the chapel

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:34
Interior with the "matchbox" roof slided

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:36
Sliding roof from the exterior.

Juanpa
21-11-2007, 18:39
Another interior view