The project rejects rigid functional segregation in favor of an urban ecosystem. It is not conceived merely as a mixed-use building (maternity, medical spaces, offices, and retail), but as an architectural organism capable of orchestrating seemingly opposing energies: the discipline of medical precision, the productivity of work, and the effervescence of everyday life.
The ensemble is organized into two distinct yet conceptually unified volumes. A solid brick plinth, articulated through arches, anchors the building to its site and establishes a tactile, human-scale threshold at street level. Above it, the medical volume expresses calmness and order; its “clinical” façade avoids austerity through rhythmic modulation and controlled reflections, projecting trust rather than distance.
Set back from the street, the Office & Commercial volume forms a recessed, more open core. This part of the composition “breathes,” adopting softer, curved geometries that encourage interaction and reveal a progressively evolving material presence along the path.
The chromatic and material palette prioritizes touch and proximity. Materials with visible grain and subdued tones respond warmly to natural light. Even in medical areas, where sobriety is essential, warm accents are introduced to soften the spatial scale.
The volumetry reads as a sculptural composition defined by broad, organic, sinuous lines, giving the ensemble a fluid and coherent expression. Surfaces unfold in a controlled dynamism, avoiding rigidity and suggesting a natural continuity of form. The architectural language establishes a clear openness toward nature, both in orientation and in the shaping of volumes, enabling a direct relationship with light, air, and the surrounding landscape.
The boundary between “interior” and “exterior” is deliberately blurred. Through panoramic openings and intermediate terraces, a fluid spatial continuum is established, in which limits dissolve. The user is not constrained by space but invited into an open-ended experience, in constant dialogue with nature, perceived as a natural extension of the built environment.