LA PURIFICADORA BOUTIQUE HOTEL | PROJECTS | Legorreta Arquitectos
LA PURIFICADORA BOUTIQUE HOTEL

Category: Hotels
Region: Mexico
Year: 2007
Location: PUEBLA, PUEBLA, MEXICO
FT2 Construction: 32,292 sq ft
FT2 Ground: 12,680 sq ft
Involved Areas: Architecture, Interior Design

Collaborators:
LEGORRETA®
Ricardo Legorreta
Víctor Legorreta
Miguel Almaraz
Adriana Ciklik
Carlos Vargas C.

Associate Architects:

Arquitecto Asociado: Serrano Monjaraz Arquitectos
Juan Pablo Serrano
Rafael Monjaraz

Consultants:

INTERIOR DESIGN: LEGORRETA®, SerranoMonjaraz Arquitectos
STRUCTURAL DESIGN: García Jarque Ingenieros, SC.
MEP: Proyectos de Ingeniería Eléctrica y Sistemas Automatizados S.A. de CV.
COST ESTIMATOR: Plus Arrendamientos, SA de CV.
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE: Espacios Verdes
CONTRACTOR: Grupo Huitzilin SA de CV

Photographer:

Lourdes Legorreta
Undine Pröhl (Cortesía de Grupo Hábita)
 


Located in the city of Puebla and belonging to the Master Plan “Paseo San Francisco”, the Boutique Hotel has colonial heritage and is registered as historical patrimony, which must be respected and included as part of the new design project. The building used to be an ice factory where the water was bottled and purified. Taking this into consideration, the Boutique hotel also called “Hotel La Purificadora” was designed with the following facilities: 26 guestrooms, reception-shop, restaurant-bar, kitchen, ballrooms for events, patio with a 4-floor-height, meeting rooms, offices, and cave. The amenities include a pool, terrace for events, gym, jacuzzi, massage and a steam room. The project consists of a large lateral patio which is surrounded by a L-shape building in each level: on the ground floor, working as a living room, it is a prolongation of the height of the restaurant-bar and the reception-shop; in 2nd and 3rd floor, it is an empty space that separate the circulations from the rooms and on the 4th floor limiting the amenities zone. The height of the patio is partially covered by a rooftop. The facades have the same treatment as the old buildings, extending plaster and stone in all the height of them.



RELATED NEWS