{"id":7118,"date":"2026-04-10T17:00:01","date_gmt":"2026-04-10T17:00:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.angesfinanciers.org\/?p=7118"},"modified":"2026-04-17T15:32:41","modified_gmt":"2026-04-17T15:32:41","slug":"superlimao-3d-prints-pavilion-for-inaugural-brazilian-architecture-biennial","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.angesfinanciers.org\/index.php\/2026\/04\/10\/superlimao-3d-prints-pavilion-for-inaugural-brazilian-architecture-biennial\/","title":{"rendered":"Superlim\u00e3o 3D-prints pavilion for inaugural Brazilian Architecture Biennial"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Brazilian<\/div>\n

Brazilian architecture studios Superlim\u00e3o<\/a>, H2C Arquitetura and Vida de Vila have created experimental pavilions<\/a> in Ibirapuera Park in S\u00e3o Paulo for the first edition of the\u00a0Brazilian Architecture Biennial.<\/span><\/p>\n

The three pavilions were presented in an exhibition called P\u00e1tio Metr\u00f3pole outside of Oscar Niemeyer’s Pavilion of Brazilian Culture in the urban park. Each presented technological solutions, ancient and modern, to Brazil’s climate.<\/p>\n

\"3D
Superlim\u00e3o 3D-printed the structure of its pavilion for the inaugural Brazilian Architecture Biennial. Photo by Everson Martins<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Superlim\u00e3o<\/a> conceived Casa Superlim\u00e3o, a structure made with a 3D-printed concrete \u2013 a technique “little-used in Brazil”, according to the studio.<\/p>\n

These sections constitute the main structure of the pavilion and were conceived based on banana leaf stems, following the “biomimetic logic” of the pavilion as a whole.<\/p>\n

\"3D
The layering of the 3D-printed walls mimics a banana leaf stem’s structure. Photo by Everson Martins<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

The building has a reciprocal-support roof structure made of engineered wood that frames an oculus, and features a modern take on cobog\u00f3, the traditional ventilating breeze blocks. Additional wall sections were made from recycled PET wool.<\/p>\n

“Architecture has always responded to climate, territory, and available conditions,” said Superlim\u00e3o partner Lula Gouveia.<\/p>\n

“Many solutions we now call traditional emerged from this constructive intelligence. The project revisits this knowledge and places it in dialogue with current technologies.”<\/p>\n

\"Vida
Vida de Vila created a pavilion based on traditional building methods. Photo by Sirlei Oldoni<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Casa Superlim\u00e3o was meant to replicate indigenous and temporary structures while using contemporary techniques.<\/p>\n

“The idea was to bring something that any Brazilian could identify with, regardless of the region they live in,” Gouveia continued.<\/p>\n

\"Taipa
Vida de Vila reused wood for the rafters and laid out the pavilion in a traditional manner. Photo by Sirlei Oldoni<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Also designed in reference to vernacular architecture was the pavilion Casa Trussardi by Vida de Vila<\/a>, a studio based in the north of Brazil.<\/p>\n

Built using taipa cladding, a regional earthen material, the structure was designed to showcase the studio’s updates on traditional Brazilian building materials.<\/p>\n

\"Demountable
H2C Arquitetura created a demountable structure wrapped in a composite fabric “skin”. Photo by Adriano Pacelli<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

It features a thatched roof with airy interiors, reclaimed-wood structural elements, and earthen tiles on the floor.<\/p>\n

Outside, a rammed-earth partition fronts the house-like pavilion.<\/p>\n

“Casa Trussardi synthesises, at a domestic scale, some of the research and practices developed by the studio in recent years around earthen architecture, the use of natural materials, and the incorporation of traditional building knowledge into contemporary design,” said the studio.<\/p>\n