Project Details
- Project Name
- Parque Colinas del Sol
- Architect
- Francisco Pardo Arquitecto
- Client/Owner
- INFONAVIT & CIDS
- Project Types
- Community
- Project Scope
- Renovation/Remodel
- Size
- 195,903 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2018
- Shared by
- Miabelle Salzano
- Team
-
Francisco Pardo
Daniel Vázquez
Ivan Saucedo
Julián Ramírez
Karen Burkart
Sofía Alami
Wilfrido Estrada
- Consultants
-
Construction contractor: Omesa,Structural Engineer: Decsa
- Project Status
- Built
Parque Colinas del Sol was built in conjunction with Parque Los Héroes.
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
Commissioned by CIDS and INFONAVIT — the main Mexican Housing Institutions reshaping Mexico’s mortgage market and promoting sustainable housing development — Parque Colinas del Sol and Parque Los Héroes, both designed by Francisco Pardo Arquitecto are part of a wider programme rethinking public space to revert the poor conditions of social housing over the last 30 years and heal the scars of abandoned properties and social segregation that affect the urban outskirts of the country.
Created in only six months, in full alignment with tight budgetary requirements and the need for ongoing low maintenance, the two parks featuring simple design solutions and affordable/low-cost materials such as concrete, steel and cement blocks, and have been built with the support of the local community, by mobilizing the enthusiasm of local residents and generating a sense of belonging to a multicultural community.
“It is important to change not only the physical condition but also the perception of the space: as a designer, I believe that supporting local communities to achieve better public spaces for their families helps the greater community” — asserts Francisco Pardo, founder of the Mexican firm.
Parque Colinas del Sol consists of the revitalization of the plazas and parks pertaining to the Unidad Habitacional de Colinas del Sol in Almoloya de Juárez. In order to optimize the two-hectare area, the site has been divided into different thematic areas — from the playground to the meditation spot, the skate ramp and football court to the pavilion for public events, enabling spontaneous and effective architectural interventions.
A partially contaminated water stream has been transformed into a river allowing a slow drop watering system for tvegetation and articulating the different sections of the park, which have been designed according to the activity and the users’ age, to foster family gatherings and the integration of the community.
Although they have been designed according to specific natural and social conditions, both projects feature common elements, thus ensuring harmony among the built and natural environments that can be repeated or integrated into a system that is potentially applicable to any other context. One is the floor cement block, which can be easily adapted to any layout, be it natural or artificial. The creative combination of the blocks and in-situ poured concrete filling, generate new patterns like an urban tapestry. The second is the playground system: the various concrete walls and metal bars can be arranged in multiple configurations, thereby constituting different spaces that are suitable for all uses and users.