TEO CENTER FOR CULTURE, ART AND CONTENT | Archiol Designs
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TEO CENTER FOR CULTURE, ART AND CONTENT

A.LERMAN ARCHITECTS LTD.
ISRAEL

© Nimrod Levy

PROJECT DETAILS:

Client: Herzliya development company Ltd. Completion year: September 2019 Built area: 2500 m2 Location: Herzliya, Israel Principal architect: Asaf Lerman Project architects: Danielle Nagila, Nimrod Schenkelbach, Itai Bachor. Photo credit: Amit Geron, Nimrod Levy

KNOW MORE ABOUT THE DESIGNERS:

In a beachside residential area of Herzliya, TEO (the Theodor Herzl Center for culture, art, and content) comes into view as a distinct single-story building, eminently lower than the neighborhood’s enclosed private mansions. The freestanding TEO opens up a wide panorama toward the west—the horizon over the ocean—thus rupturing the visual and social narrative of walled luxury villas this area of Herzliya is known for. The insertion of a fully exposed public cultural center as an event in the surrounding urbanscape was key to the design strategy.

TEO provides a unique functional facility to the city’s art-practicing and culture-seeking residents. The plan is designed within a 50 by 50 m2 around an offset central patio surrounded by the various programs: a music conservatory, a dance school, art and ceramics studios, a gallery, a senior recreation center, and a cafeteria. An upper partial floor houses a library complemented by a 300 m2 open deck.

The uniqueness of the design lies in the coherence of a precise geometric module that is strictly enforced throughout; Concrete (on-site casts & precast units), textured glass, and metal flow seamlessly from exterior to interior surfaces. Cutting-edge sealing techniques were used to protect the building from the rain while maintaining its flat roof silhouette and tight proportions.

The patio (292 m2) makes available a space of quiet and welcoming scale. The floated, draining floor provides a pleasing horizontal surface from which a single mature oak tree rises. Direct sunlight from above dynamically projects its presence across the patio’s surfaces, creating ever-changing visual compositions of organic against geometrical form.

GALLERY:

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