Jan 16, 2014
Arch Daily
COMMUNITY
•
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL
Architects: Yoav Messer Architects
Area: 185 m²
Year: 2013
photographs: Amit Geron
Constructor: Rom-Geves
Management And Supervision:S. Horvitz Engineering Ltd, Koby Mizrahi
Landscape:Roy Cooper
Design Team:Iftah Hayner, Henly Elor, Laura Hoffman Schaeftler
City:Tel Aviv
Country:Israel
Text description provided by the architects. The center was built primarily to serve the blessed activity of Etgarim organization. That is why it has to be functional and meet current needs while looking and foreseeing upcoming future needs.
At the same time, it was built in honor of the late Shneur Cheshin, and is meant to express values of presence and excellence – due to its strategic location in the park and public space, the need of marketing the organization’s activity, and also great respect and appreciation for the man in which the canter is named after.
A great deal of attention was given to the design – inviting, accessible and flexible (inside and outside areas).
Due to its location in the open public space, a project like that should be “sewn” with loose ends with thought of optimal function over the years.
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Concept: Openness, Functionality and Presence.
This project was planned specifically for using as an accessible and open space - both for Etgarim members with their special needs, and city residents.
On a symbolic level, freedom is expressed in positioning the three buildings freely in the developing, in the independent shading detail which is cut from the building, and in the flexible unrestricted plan. On the functional level, freedom is expressed in the context and movement set to the domain and in it.
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The disabled, whose daily routine is filled with level differences, get a leveled space. Narrow passages and minimal doors are replaced by wide doorways, backed by a unique shutter system, which allow a direct and spacious access to the entire center.
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Shneur House was designed as a space which is open for everyone rather than confined, and it constitutes an integral part of the area it’s located at. It is not a building bordering the park or surrounded by it – the park and the building are one. They’re integrated, feed and being fed of each other. The open area is the lobby, it’s the corridor and it’s also the “art” on the walls. All of the spaces are illuminated with natural light and get passageway airing. The dialogue between the built morphology, the tight sail and the open space impart a feel of a dynamic and accessible space.
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Project location
Address:
HaYarkon Park, Tel Aviv, Israel