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© Aitor Estévez
The archaeological site of Can Tacó stands in the Turó d’en Roina, in the natural setting of Turons de les Tres Creus.
© Estudi d’arquitectura Toni Gironès
In a highly fragmented metropolitan area, we have been asked to recover an area of outstanding natural and archaeological value.
© Estudi d’arquitectura Toni Gironès
Built by successive terracing and partly with licorella local stone, what had been an important settlement prior to the construction of the Via Augusta, is today a natural viewpoint towards the Vallès counties.
© Estudi d’arquitectura Toni Gironès
We have intervened in the backfill of the Roman traces, improving the content (the space) and highlighting the container (the walls). We have worked with the land that during centuries had covered the historical remainings and finally got accumulated outside of the archeological site created by the excavations.
© Aitor Estévez
This land, just like the gravel and the rocks of the old (supposedly) Roman quarry, has been selected and ordered, but in a new disposition, giving it a new meaning.
© Aitor Estévez
A first steel mesh contains the new stones, which contain the land and gravel that will jointly reproduce the overlapping horizontal planes where the Romans once transited.
© Aitor Estévez
A second mesh, denser and thinner, is disposed like a curtain during a period of time, like a backdrop where the various archaeological remains are projected.
© Aitor Estévez
In this way stone and steel, mountain and industry, cohexist in this landscape of accumulation, made dynamic by the contact among the fragments; interpreting the existing, valorizing and activating it, adding and not erasing, and at the same time co-evolving with the environment while trying to optimize available resources.
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