A Shimmering Metallic Veil of GKD Metal Fabric Wraps Barcelona’s “In” Place To Meet

July 12, 2016

Barcelona’s main artery is the Promenade Las Ramblas, which connects the Placa Catalunya with the harbor. A colorful mix of street artists, vendors of flowers, animals and newspapers, market halls and cafes draws local inhabitants and visitors alike to this magical, elegant promenade for relaxed strolling. On each side of this central lifeline, flanked by roads, lie the old city quarters El Raval and Barri Gotic, both worthy destinations for lovers of culture and cuisine. And here, too, perfectly placed at the hub of the action, is the new four-star design hotel of the famous Spanish hotel chain Barcelo, the Barcelo Raval. A 124-foot-high elliptical cylinder, completely clad in a veil of shimmering woven metallic mesh, this 186-room hotel is literally the linchpin of the Rambla del Raval’s two axes. A special production of GKD’s spiral mesh type Escale ensures that guests have an optimal view of this beautiful city outwards through the metal facade, while for onlookers outside the mesh mirrors a subtle reflection of the hotel’s surroundings.

The Barcelo Hotel Group was founded in 1931 and today has more than 180 hotels in Europe, Latin America, the Caribbean and the USA. The group operates 52 of these three-, four- and five-star hotels as well as inexpensive city hotels in Spain alone. The latest addition to the chain’s upmarket category is the Barcelo Raval, which opened end of September just a short walking distance from the famous contemporary art museums – Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona (MACBA) and Centre de Cultura Contemporania de Barcelona (CCB) – and from the Ramblas and the harbor. The quarter itself also offers a variety of diversions with its countless cafes, shops and galleries. With 182 rooms and 4 suites, the Barcelo Raval is compact yet cosmopolitan. The hotel’s elliptical form alone makes it stand out from the square street grid in which it is located, but its crowning glory is the panorama terrace on the 12th floor with its 360 degree view over the pride of Catalonia.

In 2004, the Spanish architects CMV began with the planning of this exceptional hotel. Their design espoused a consistently avant-garde, formally minimalistic concept that creates an exciting interplay with the structure’s surroundings. Faced with the task of cladding the complete surface of the elliptical building with a metallic membrane, the architects chose the company GKD, which has already caused a worldwide sensation with numerous spectacular architectural applications of its metallic meshes. With skillful precision and technological innovation, this world market leader for woven metallic architectural and design fabrics has repeatedly widened the horizons of what seemed possible and set new standards. The facade of the Planet-m pavilion at the Expo 2000 shot to the top of the architectural milestones charts because this was the first time that a round object had been successfully clad in an apparently seamless mantel. The three-dimensional facade of the Maison Folie de Wazemmes in Lille is another impressive example of the design scope afforded by the spiral mesh type Escale: In this case, the shaping of the metal mesh panels was so extreme that “skin” was the only really appropriate metaphor to describe the optical effect.

Convinced by these lighthouse projects and by numerous subsequent applications using Escale 7×1, the Barcelo Group decided that they also wanted spiral mesh cladding for their new building on the Rambla del Raval, intended as it was to become Barcelona’s latest “in” place to meet. The structure of the mesh allows panels in a width of up to 26 feet and practically unlimited length to be produced, as any number of spirals can be strung together. The spirals mold themselves to structures curved in two planes, to spheres, to amorphous shapes or – as in this case – to an elliptical building.

What was new in the specifications of the client in Barcelona was that the spirals were to have the greatest possible apertures in order to ensure a transparent cladding with an optimal view outwards from inside the hotel. The normal pitch of the round bars in Escale 7×1 is 100 mm; the pitch of the spirals 20 mm. For the Barcelo Raval, GKD developed a special production with a round bar pitch of 150 mm and a spiral pitch of 40 mm. 24 panels of this special version of Escale, the largest measuring 114 x 26 feet, were then installed in front of the glass facade that starts on the first floor with a clearance of 50 to 60 cm to create a corridor for the window cleaners. The ground floor of the design hotel has no windows, so the mesh facade begins above the solid basement plinth. The cladding is attached via flat profiles, curved to the radius of the building, which are inserted into the top and bottom spirals, then fastened to the substructure and tensioned by means of fork terminals. Intermediate attachments along the window cleaners’ corridor on each floor prevent any uncontrolled movements of the huge mesh panels.

The glittering, silvery high-tech grace of the mesh dissolves the minimalistic form of the elliptical cylinder and emotionalizes it through reflection of the light and the lifestyle of the throbbing metropolis. After nightfall, the mesh – almost totally transparent – allows a clear view of the ever-changing display of lights shining out from inside the hotel. Through this constant interplay with its surroundings, the shimmering membrane transforms the new hotel into an unconventional eye-catcher in Barcelona’s trendy downtown district that unites a feeling of belonging and of identity for local inhabitants and visitors alike.

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