Fernando Romero, Mexiko

Interpretations 1999 - 2001

6 July 2001 - 12 August 2001

Eröffnung/Opening:
Friday, 6 July 2001, 6.30pm


 

Aedes Cooperation Partners

 

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Fernando Romero, Mexiko

Fernando Romero is a young Mexican architect who founded the LCM architecture office in Mexico in 1998. LCM has three main objectives: contemporary design, investigation and contemporary cultural programs. Pursuing experimental design and researching Mexico City, LCM began as a workshop of young architects and students. It brings to the Aedes Gallery three current projects and two completed projects as well as a data recollection project (ZMVM) that explores the transformation of the critical conditions that define urban life in Mexico City:

House M, Mixoac, Mexico City (1999):
This is the first project LCM built in Mexico, and the experiment stands to an architecture that has a physical condition far beyond its concepts. The systems that are used here will never be used again. The house disobeys the comprehension of modernity, dictated by a context defined by chaos. The living room is buried, while the rooms live to the ceiling of the house, on top of a ruled surfaced slab with different geometry.

Flats in Colima, La Roma, Mexico City (2000):
For the building it was necessary to maintain a distance from the evident Dutch influence. A three storey structure was designed to distribute artist flats, each with a completely different lecture.

Anexo D, Desierto de los Leones, Mexico City (2001):
With this project, LCM was presented an opportunity to experiment both with the designing process, as well as with new constructive systems. The concept is one continuous skin which wraps in its own to define the space and to produce a ramp that links to the garden. Theoretically, the construction shows the confrontation of two historical moments, presenting the possible evolution of a modernist house in Mexico City during the 1950s, where the family’s growth requirements, a children’s room and a playing area would be placed. The concept of the construction is that of an iron structure covered with polyurethane foam, and this one on its turn, covered with fibre glass.

House in Ixtapa, Zihuatanejo, Guerrero, Mexico (2001):
The property is situated on a private beach on the coast of the Pacific Ocean. The house is divided into two conditions: a public and a private space. The first is contained by a solid mass that holds the services like the kitchen and restrooms. And the second is on the upper floor and it has five, almost identical rooms with three different kinds of bathrooms. The concept comes from a surface that while blending on its own, defines the differences between public and private.

House for José Noe Suro, Guadalajara, Mexico (2002):
José Noe Suro is a prominent young contemporary art collector from Guadalajara, Jalisco, the second most important city in the country after Mexico City. One of his most important conditions in commissioning a firm to build his house was that the architect be involved in the world of contemporary art. The house itself is divided into two conditions: public and private, where private space stands floating on top of the public space, giving the necessary light filter, movement and flexible conditions of scale. A continuous skin defines the public space that holds the space necessary to exhibit the personal collection of objects, videos, and paintings. The private space will carry the loads of all the tiled walls that define the public area.

ZMVM:
Is a data recollection project that explores the transformation on the critical conditions that define urban life in Mexico City: population, size, economy, insecurity, pollution, water, infrastructure, housing, transport, relations, informalities, young pop, and education. The analysis is more general than specific and it constitutes a first step towards more specific projects, proposals and solutions that will continue to deal with Mexico City in parts and as a whole.

Talks by Kristin Feireiss, Berlin, Mrs. Sari Bermudez, Head of Ministry of Culture, Dr. Gabriele von Mahlsen-Tilborch, Cultural Department Auswärtiges Amt, Berlin, Catherine David, Paris, and Hubertus Adam, Zürich, will accompany the opening on the 6th of July 2001.