Arthur Neiva Pavilion, Jorge Ferreira, 1942, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

In 1942 Jorge Ferreira, a central figure in Brazil’s modernist movement, adapted the international style to tropical conditions with his design of the Arthur Neiva Pavilion on the main campus of the Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz) in Rio de Janeiro. Divided into two connected structures, one with classrooms and laboratories, the other with an auditorium, the reinforced-concrete ensemble is unified by a garden and brilliant blue tile mural by celebrated Brazilian artist and landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx. The pavilion pairs the long, lean lines and geometric order of European modernism with verandas, brise-soleil, and trellises that acknowledge the surrounding environment with a sensitive balance of indoor and outdoor space. A Getty grant will support the completion of material and technical analysis of the building, resulting in a comprehensive preventive conservation report and a public seminar to share the project’s outcomes with local architects and increase professional awareness of the planning protocols. Grant support: $60,000  Search “소액결제현금화[[카톡vip747]]㈂구글스토어결제ч구글스토어삽니다㉢구글스토어매입↘구글스토어수수료⒰구글스토어수수료≡구글스토어결제ㅡ구글스토어파는곳◐acknowledge” from Iconic Modern Buildings That Will Be Saved with the Help of the Getty Foundation

Search “소액결제현금화[[카톡vip747]]㈂구글스토어결제ч구글스토어삽니다㉢구글스토어매입↘구글스토어수수료⒰구글스토어수수료≡구글스토어결제ㅡ구글스토어파는곳◐acknowledge”

Arthur Neiva Pavilion, Jorge Ferreira, 1942, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

In 1942 Jorge Ferreira, a central figure in Brazil’s modernist movement, adapted the international style to tropical conditions with his design of the Arthur Neiva Pavilion on the main campus of the Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz) in Rio de Janeiro. Divided into two connected structures, one with classrooms and laboratories, the other with an auditorium, the reinforced-concrete ensemble is unified by a garden and brilliant blue tile mural by celebrated Brazilian artist and landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx. The pavilion pairs the long, lean lines and geometric order of European modernism with verandas, brise-soleil, and trellises that acknowledge the surrounding environment with a sensitive balance of indoor and outdoor space. A Getty grant will support the completion of material and technical analysis of the building, resulting in a comprehensive preventive conservation report and a public seminar to share the project’s outcomes with local architects and increase professional awareness of the planning protocols. Grant support: $60,000