A major intervention located at the confluence of a zone with great environmental and landscape value, and an urban area with few services, requires a territorial strategy.
The starting point is a pre-urbanised setting, which used to be home to an important industrial-residential complex that fell into a state of ruin with the passage of time and disuse until it almost disappeared, but where physical and (above all) sentimental elements prevail, which must also be taken into account when it comes to intervening. The other side of the equation is that, within the same time frame, the amazing natural setting surrounding it has been revalued and even turned into an environmental point of reference.
Faced with this situation, the project sides with time and gives priority to the natural aspect over others, committing to a reorganization of the area that is as sensitive and natural as possible within the requirements of the demanding function programme imposed, so that it becomes a transitional element between the urban and the intensely natural.
With these premises in mind, the intervention aims to turn the area into a "naturalized" space, represented by a large native pine forest covering almost all its surface area and that, thanks to the height of the trees) provides shelter for the group of installations and buildings that make up the complex, striving at all times for them to interfere as little as possible.