Download - Bosque ProteCtor Cerro BlanCo master Plan
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En 1989, 2.000 hectáreas son declaradas bosque protegido. In 1989, 2,000 hectares are declared protected forest.
Hoy, el área de bosque protegido es 6.078 hectáreas. Nowadays, the protected forest area is 6.078 hectares.
700 Especies de plantas vasculares.700 Vascular plant species.
54 Especies de mamíferos, 6 en peligro de extinción.54 Mammal species, 6 threatened with extinction.
221 Especies de aves, 21 en peligro de extinción.221 Bird species, 21 threatened with extinction.
20 Especies de anfibios y reptiles, 60% endémicos.20 Amphibian and reptile species, 60% are endemic.
Very often, the growth of the city is done at the expense of native vegetation. Urban pressure ends up consuming forests that have taken centuries to grow, thus losing valuable ecosystems. This project proposes an alternative: with minimal architectural interventions, the forest becomes a learning agent mobilizing use as an engine of ecological preservation.
KeywordsReserve
Conservation
Borders
Project
Vegetation
Bosque ProteCtor Cerro BlanCo master Plan
aL BorDe
Guayaquil, Ecuador2021
1 Bosque Protegido Cerro Blanco. Coexistencia entre bosque y ciudad. / Coexistance between forest & city. 6.078 hectáreas de bosque urbano, uno de los más grandes de América Latina. / 6,078 hectares of urban forest, one of the biggest in Latin America.© Al Borde
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informal urban expansion
formal urban expansion
CERRO BLANCO
Guayaquil, EcuadorPoblación / Population: 2.698.000Área urbana / City Area: 34.500 haÁrea de bosque / Forest Area: 6.078 ha
Bosque educativo y de ocio Educational & leisure forest
Dispositivo de reunión e intercambioGathering & exchange buffer
Dispositivo productivo y socialProductive & social buffer
City Limits Collide With ForestThe Bosque Protector Cerro Blanco, located in Guayaquil, has 6,078 hectares and is one of the last remnants of dry forest on the Ecuadorian coast. The reserve was inaugurated in 1989 when the city had 1.5 million inhabitants, which has currently doubled. This growth exerts great pressure on the forest’s limits and threatens its conservation. It has 221 endemic bird species, of which 21 are threatened worldwide: 54 mammal species, 9 endemic, and 6 threatened. Up to 60% of amphibians and reptiles are also endemic.
The reserve is on the city’s urban expansion axis. To the south, it borders a large real estate development for middle and upper-middle-class housing, inflicting pressure on the use and value of land. To the north, it borders with informal expansion: large areas urbanized through land trafficking have already crossed the boundaries of the forest, leading to problems such as logging and illegal hunting.
Transforming Weaknesses Into StrengthsThe Bosque Protector Cerro Blanco Master Plan proposes a coexistence between the city’s growth and the natural reserve through what we have called “Ecological Strips.” These strips reinterpret the commercial status on one side and promote social regeneration on the other. Allowing the reserve to open less than 1% of its territory, the master plan can support a large influx of visitors without affecting the intangible area of the natural preserve.
2 Bosque protegido versus crecimiento urbano. Coexistencia entre bosque y ciudad. / Bosque Protegido against urban sprawl. Coexistance between forest & city. Las medidas de conservación ambiental se convierten en oportunidades para preservar el bosque. / Environmental conservation measures turn into opportunities to preserve the forest.© Al Borde
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Mercado abierto
OpenMarket
Oficinas
Offices
Zona de juegos
Playground
Puestos de vigilancia
LookoutPoints
Puentes
Bridges
Torres de observación
ObservationTowers
Centro de convenciones
Convention center
Centro comunitario
CommunityCenter
Instalación Landart de bienvenida
LandartWelcomingInstallation
Centro de visitantes
VisitorsCenter
Planta de piscinasde tratamiento de agua
Water treatment plant pools
Plaza de bienvenida
Welcoming square
Vivienda colectiva
Collective housing
Instalaciones públicas
Public facilities
Paseo peatonal
Pedestrian boulevard
Área agrícola y productiva
Agricultural & productive area
Bosque protegido Cerro Blanco
Cerro Blancoprotected forest
Centro de visitantes
Visitors center
3 El bosque da la bienvenida a la ciudad. Dispositivo de reunión e intercambio. / The forest welcomes the city. Gathering & Exchange buffer.La arquitectura se dispersa en el paisaje. / The architecture is scattered into landscape.© Al Borde
4 Inclusión social y medioambiental. Dispositivo productivo y social. / Social & environmental inclusión. Productive & social buffer.+100 ha en peligro de urbanización ilegal se convertirán en amortiguadores de producción agrícola. / +100 ha in danger of illegal urbanization will turns into an agro-production buffer.© Al Borde
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Planta / PlanS. E. / N. S.© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
Elevación / ElevationS. E. / N. S.© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
Centro de servicios múltiples / Center of Services. © Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
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Planta torre de observación / Observation tower plan S. E. / N. S.© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
The proposal is to turn the areas already exposed to formal and informal urban growth into engines of environmental preservation, economic development, and social transformation, thus protecting the great biodiversity and ecological value of intangible areas. In that sense, the threats become the tools that help preserve the forest.
Towards the southern limit – with a marked commercial vocation – the plan proposes a Strip of Encounter and Exchanges, distributing the projects in a way that always generates an interaction with the forest. On the other hand, the Social and Productive Strip is proposed towards the northern limit, a buffer zone of marked public use that not only contains the informal city but also provides it with infrastructure and services. Finally, the Educational and Leisure Forest is set towards the reserve, where the built projects serve to motivate the forest’s discovery.
Each strip is mainly a door to explore and learn from the forest through non-invasive architectural
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Elevación torre de observación / Observation tower elevationS. E. / N. S.© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
Torre de observación / Observation tower© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
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Corte feria / Fair’s sectionS. E. / N. S.© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
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Feria / Fair© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
Puente / Bridge© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
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Elevación Centro de Administración e Interpretación / Center of Administration and Interpretation ElevationS. E. / N. S.© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr
elements. The proposal uses local materials produced within a radius of 5 km, including concrete, while only excluding steel. That way, instead of adapting the site to architecture, the project does the opposite: it uses natural conditions to create site-specific experiences, contributing to environmental education in the city. ARQ
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plan maestro bosque protector cerro blanco / Bosque protector cerro Blanco master plan
Arquitectos / Architects: Al BordeColaboradores / Contributors: Iara Pezzuti, João Cardoso, Marina Novaes, Natália VieiraUbicación / Location: Guayaquil, EcuadorCliente / Client: Fundación Pro BosqueCálculo estructural / Structure: Patricio CevallosConstrucción / Construction: Miguel RamosDirección de obra / Works supervisor: María Verónica PaszkiewiczAño de proyecto / Project year: 2019-2020Año de construcción / Construction year: 2021-presenteApoyo / Support: Holcim Ecuador
Apoyo académico / Academic support: Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago Pistone, Unr, Argentina. Coordinadores / coordinators: Manuel Cucurel, Gonzalo Montoya, Luciano Stechina, Juan Ignacio Pignatta, Franco Mascetti, Julieta Giorgietti. Colaboradores / contributors: Gianluca Bella, Abril Bidrera, Lucio Mastrogiacomo, Octavio Liberatore, Juan Ignacio Ortega, Clara Tanlongo, María Noelia Segatore, Pilar Otero, Brian Ejsmont, Pedro Caleri, Juan Cingolani, Micaela Siles, Magdalena Azurmendi, Juan Francisco de la Torre.Fotografía / Photography: JaG Studio, Al BordeVisualizaciones / Visualizations: PinxelVideo / Video: JaG Studio
Al Borde<[email protected]>
Al Borde is an architectural practice formed by David Barragán, Pascual Gangotena, Marialuisa Borja, and Esteban Benavides, architects trained at the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador. Named among the 100+ Best Architecture Firms 2019 by dOMUS magazine, the practice was part of the official selection of the Venice Biennale 2016 and has received the Lafarge Holcim Acknowledgment Latin America 2014; the Global Award for Sustainable Architecture 2013; the Schelling Architecure Prize 2012, among others. Its work has been published in the monograph Menos es todo (cDMX,2014) and in Las Tres Esperanzas (Quito, 2020). Visiting professors at Ucal (Peru) and at UDla (Chile).
Centro de Administración e Interpretación / Center of Administration and Interpretation© Expresión Gráfica, Cátedra Santiago, Pistone Unr