Legorreta Love- Visual arts Center Santa Fe

Think of Santa Fe, and your mind’s eye renders the image in sepia. By both tradition and design review in the historic districts, adobe and faux-adobe walls all wear the color of bare earth. There’s something to be said for it, as no other North American city grows from its landscape with such an organic sense of place.

But when Mexico City architect Ricardo Legorreta won the commission to design the Visual Arts Center for the College of Santa Fe, he found inspiration in all the other colors of nature surrounding the brown town: the high-desert sky, the brilliant sunsets, the mountain flowers. Instead of growing out of the earth, this building drops in from the sky.

Legorreta’s international reputation is built on his audacious palette. He doesn’t use it to startle or provoke, rather to provide unexpected pleasures. A courtyard, painted a stunning cobalt blue, virtually melts into the sky at certain times of day; it’s like a room bounded in two dimensions and infinite in the third. A train of skylights with tangerine wells sprays color into an otherwise routine hallway. Outside, the simple but powerful angular forms – a jumble of boxes, pyramids, and fins – constantly hurl shadows at each other, so the interplay of brilliant color and deep shade becomes part of the architectural geometry.

When you are in Santa Fe, stop by and admire the exquisite architecture!

Still pinching ourselves that we will be living at Zocalo -designed by the world-renowned architect!
Designed with a brilliant use of color and traditional Mexican architectural elements, Zocalo showcases Legorreta’s signature use of vivid hues, geometrics, and warm, abundant light. It just feels SO right! We love it there and can’t wait to get moved in.

Samantha RubleComment