Eladio Dieste y la cerámica armadala forma de lo resistente

  1. Marín, Ana Mª
  2. Barluenga, Gonzalo
Revue:
Arquitecturas del Sur

ISSN: 0716-2677 0719-6466

Année de publication: 2014

Titre de la publication: ARQUITECTURA MODERNA EN LATINOAMÉRICA

Volumen: 32

Número: 45

Pages: 90-103

Type: Article

D'autres publications dans: Arquitecturas del Sur

Résumé

The work of engineer Eladio Dieste has yet to be contextualized. The inventor of reinforced ceramic in Uruguay, he transformed this material into an efficient, economic and elegant alternative to reinforced concrete. Dieste changed the conception of brick as a filler material that can only be used under compression by using it to produce visually surprising shapes and in elements under flexure.Parallelisms between Dieste’s work and Catalan vaults are mistaken, as the only coincidence is the use of brick. Dieste took it upon himself to deny this similarity when asked about the matter: “The origin of reinforced ceramic did not come from it [the Catalan vault]. Instead, the source can be found in reinforced concrete structures, in fast stripping techniques; that is the basis of the structures. The coincidence between aspects of the final result and some Catalan shells does not mean that reinforced ceramic was inspired by the timbrel vault. It has nothing to do with it.”The aim of this paper is to define the relationships between Dieste’s reinforced ceramic and the reinforced concrete shells that inspired his work and identify the contributions that transformed reinforced ceramic into a new building material capable of producing a new way of making architecture.