Memory
On 29 March, some of the main regional and national media outlets marked the birth of the culture factory that once was an alcohol factory. In a predictably promising future, turned to creation and art creators, the Arquipélago – Contemporary Art Center emerges with an irrefutable mission: observe, stimulate, disseminate and produce through transdisciplinary action in the fields of visual, audiovisual/multimedia and performing arts.
In its productive/creative mission, which today is a mission of knowledge, culture and critical mass, we regard the building as a functional continuity that runs through history and that was determined and placed at the service of the human structures headquartered there.
The timeline of this building’s history/memory and of the structures that preceded the Arquipélago – CAC is very recent; it is only 122 years old. The newspaper A Persuasão from 8 February 1893 announced the project to build three alcohol factories on the island of São Miguel, two in Vila Franca and one in Ribeira Grande. It focused on the latter one as its planning was further advanced; the construction site had already been chosen; the Town Hall of Ribeira Grande had granted it the right to use water from the Teixeira Stream for manufacturing, and in this context, a narrow-gauge railway linking that town to Ponta Delgada was even being considered2. For the author of that news article, this seemed to be too many factories, but for the author of an article published on 21 April 1893 in the news section of Estrela Oriental, what should have been highlighted was the importance of this initiative to life and to the awakening the so-called lethargy of Ribeira Grande3.
In fact, it was only on March 29, 1893, and not in February, that the use of water from the Teixeira Stream was formally decided, as stated in the minutes of a special session of the Town Hall. The aforementioned minutes record the discussion and approval of the terms of use by the factory, with restrictions in irrigation months and with channelling costs being incurred by applicants. The aforementioned document also stresses the importance of this construction for the so-called improvement of the municipality, as well as for the valuation of land in the cape of the town4. In short, without exhausting the list, the opening of this industrial unit would bring obvious advantages to the municipality of Ribeira Grande, which justified its great openness to the initiative.
As for the doubts expressed in the article from A Persuasão about the simultaneous construction of three distillation plants (two would never be built), they deserve special attention because they further particularize and emphasize the context of the origin of the Ribeira Grande Distillation Factory.
In early 1893, with antecedents in previous years and continuing in 1894, the recurring theme of newspapers of São Miguel (and other islands) was the so-called alcohol issue. The emerging problem stemmed from the implementation of a monopoly system and particularly from the increase of taxes applied to the Azorean industry. The whole situation led to several reactions, with various representations and protest committees. During the Sunday rally held in Ponta Delgada on 2 July 1893, the voices of Montalverne de Sequeira, Pereira de Ataíde and Manuel da Câmara rose up against the infamous tax of 100 reis per litre of alcohol. According to the speakers, this tax could not exceed 50 reis per litre under any circumstance if one did not want to destroy the agricultural and industrial work of the Azores5. Generally speaking, these measures of the central government would seriously impact the economy of the islands (or of the main islands São Miguel and Terceira6) by hitting one of their crucial productive pillars, alongside with the production of sweet potato, an essential (but not exclusive) raw material.
Equally connected to the alcohol issue, but not limited to the years 1893, 1894 and 1895, the Azores witness a significant number of rallies, demonstrations, explanations and propaganda events7. The islands were living through the full agitation of the so-called 1st autonomist movement, which would come to a formal end with the famous decree dated 2 March 1895 and the recognition of the administrative autonomy of the archipelago. This was then the context in which the Ribeira Grande Distillation Factory was born, a context that was, in principle, adverse from an economic point of view but promising in social and political terms.
Little is still known about the construction and production at the factory. Nevertheless, two distinct moments of the initial investment are already clear. The first one dates from 1893 and includes the establishment of the first company, period for which there are news articles and announcements about the license issued by the Civil Government on 11 August8, the reception of proposals for the supply of building materials on 7 July and 27 October of the same year9, the subscription of funds/investors in August and September10, the shareholders’ meeting that approved the articles of incorporation on 1 October11, and the acquisition of equipment for outfitting the factory12.
As for the second moment, it started right at the beginning of 1894. In January, the dissolution of the previous company was made public13, an event that was also echoed in the minutes of the Ribeira Grande Town Council meeting held on 18 January14. About a month later, a new company was established with the same purpose15, although the deed of incorporation was only signed on 21 March16. The town council issued a new license for the use of water from the Teixeira Stream on 8 March17, and new managers were appointed to the factory on 11 April. Among them, we can highlight the chairman of the general meeting Teotónio de Ornelas Bruges, the chairman of the board Marquis of Praia e Monforte, the managing director Francisco Augusto Serpa, and the engineering and architectural consultants João Cândido de Morais and João Silvestre de Almeida18.
With this new momentum, construction of the factory finally began and, in the week of 9 to 15 April 1894, they broke ground19 with construction work starting on 16 April20. In October, there was news on the progress made and on the arrival of equipment (machinery) and coal for manufacturing; in November, the installation of machinery was finished and the expedite building process of the factory was praised21; on 3 June 1897, the expansion of the factory was already announced22.
As for the start of operations, it was initially announced for late 1893 / early 189423 and later postponed to December 1894 or January 189524. The first campaign was definitely announced for 2 November 189525, a campaign that, in terms of sweet potatoes, would end in mid-January and continue later on using corn26. On 29 January 1896, the 1st export of alcohol produced at the Ribeira Grande plant made the news27. As for the shutdown of the factory, so far we have established that it took place after the creation of the Union of Azorean Alcohol Factories (UFAA) on 15 December 1902 on a date that is yet to be determined. Following the 1901 Decree, which reduced the limits to alcohol production in the Azores, two industrial units were shut down in São Miguel and many others in Terceira. One of these units was the Ribeira Grande Distillation Factory.
From then on, the history/memory of the building and of its functionality over time still needs more research and study. The Azores Built Heritage Inventory28, in the descriptive notes of the building, mentions that the facilities of the old distillation plant were used as a tobacco dryer and military barracks. In the short time we had, we were not able to collect information about the latter function.
Nevertheless, based on relevant information and copies of property registration booklets made available by the Micaelense Tobacco Factory, it was possible to compile some facts from 1930. In that year, on 7 February, the then called Destilação Ribeira-Grandense SARL [Ribeira Grande Distillation Factory Ltd.] sold to the Sociedade Ribeira-Grandense the plot of land where a building with 11 sections designed for the distillation of alcohol was located, with the function of that facility from then on being unknown. The aforementioned Sociedade Ribeira-Grandense would sell the same building to the Micaelense Tobacco Factory on 20 October 1969. During the time it was owned by the latter company – as local people still recall, the complex was used for drying and storing tobacco. On 11 February 1999, the Micaelense Tobacco Factory sold the same building to the company Evaristo Lima Co. Ltd. It is this company that would eventually sell the building to the Autonomous Region of the Azores on 29 November 2006.
This brief timeline and review of facts demonstrates that much more can still be done to study the memory of the physical and functional structure that now houses the Arquipélago – Contemporary Art Center. With the circumstances and particular facts of its appearance clarified and with the key roles it played over time briefly listed, this stands as a testament to the human will to create, reinvent and readjust, abilities that we can associate to the physical structure that today houses the Arquipélago-CAC. Finding every time the respective place in the community, it is today a structure that features an even more archipelagic and definitely Atlantic and universal dimension through the singular form of communication that art is.
Text: Rute Dias Gregório1|DRC|Director of the Ponta Delgada Public Library and Regional Archive
*This text was published in CulturAçores – Revista de Cultura
Notes
1 The collection of information for this work would not have been possible without the collaboration of the Ponta Delgada Public Library and Regional Archive, of the Ribeira Grande Municipal Archives, of the Micaelense Tobacco Factory, and of the property section of the Regional Directorate for Budgetary and Treasury Affairs
2 A Persuasão, No. 14, 7 April 1893.
3 Estrela Oriental, No. 16, 21 April 1893.
4 Ribeira Grande Municipal Archives: Town Hall Fund, Minute Book, Minutes No. 10, 29 March 1893.
5 A Estrela Oriental, No. 14, 7 April 1893.
6 On the importance of this industry, cf. Maria Isabel João, “Indústria e industrialização”. In Enciclopédia Açoriana. Available online: http://www.culturaacores.axores.gov.pt/ea/perquisa/Default.aspx?id=7686.
7 Which also include the advent of the newspaper A Autonomia dos Açores, first published on Sunday, 5 March 1893. Cf. J. G. Reis Leite, “Autonomia dos Açores (A)”. In Enciclopédia Açoriana. Available online: http://www.culturacores.azores.gov.pt/ea/pesquisa/Default.aspx?id=4953
8 Ponta Delgada Public Library and Regional Archive: Ponta Delgada Civil Government, ct. 353, fl. 12-13.
9 A Estrela Oriental, No. 27, 7 July 1893; No. 43, 27 October 1893.
10 A Estrela Oriental, No. 31, 25 August 1893; No. 36, 8 September 1893; A Persuasão, No.1649, 23 August 1893.
11 A Persuasão, No.1665, 4 October 1893.
12 A Persuasão, No.1662, 23 November 1893.
13 A Persuasão, No.1670, 17 January 1894.
14 AMRG: FCM, Livro de Atas, Minutes No. 3, 18 January 1894.
15 A Persuasão, No.1675, 21.02.1894.
16 A Persuasão, No.1713, 14 November 1894.
17 AMRG: FCM, Livro de Atas, Minutes No. 8, 8 March 1894.
18 A Persuasão, No.1682, 11 April 1894.
19 A Persuasão, No.1683, 18 April 189.
20 A Persuasão, No.1713, 14 November 1894.
21 A Persuasão, No. 1708, 10 October 1894; No. 1713, 14 November 1894.
22 A Persuasão, No.1849, 23 June 1897.
23 A Persuasão, No.1662, 23 November 1893.
24 A Persuasão, No.1711, 31 October 1894.
25 A Persuasão, No.1761, 16 October 1895.
26 A Persuasão, No.1773, 8 January 1896; No. 1784, 25 March 1896.
27 A Persuasão, No.1776, 29 January 1896.
28 Ribeira Grande: São Miguel: Inventário do Património Imóvel dos Açores, [S.L], Direção Regional da Cultura, IAC – Instituto Açoriano de Cultura e Câmara Municipal da Ribeira Grande, 2007, p. 155.
Centre
The redevelopment and repurposing project of the pre-existing building was designed by a multidisciplinary team led by architects Francisco Vieira de Campos and Cristina Guedes, from the Consortium Menos é Mais Arquitetos Associados, Lda., and by João Mendes Ribeiro (João Mendes Ribeiro Arquiteto, Lda.), and it was internationally recognized by being one of the 40 nominees for the 2015 Mies van der Rohe Award.
Reserves
Showcasing abstract language with a sculptural/poetic function, this building establishes a visual connection between the pre-existing factory and surroundings and the new and more complex programmatic function of a contemporary arts centre. One accesses level 0 through the exhibition building, where the reserves and technical spaces necessary for this type of function are located. The reserves have a spatial organization that responds to conversion and flexibility requests in order to meet the different needs of the collection both at different scales and in terms of materials (paper, fabric, canvas, metal, wood, video, etc.).
Artist-in-residence Programs
A pre-existing building, it connects the reserves and the exhibition building and takes advantage of its large size and high ceilings to implement the current concept of experimental space for artistic production, which is highlighted by artist-in-residence programs that require the creation of spatial, functional and technical conditions that enable artists (in their multiple facets) to take over the building. This space is a sort of an entrance chamber allowing the audience to interact with the creative process and to foresee the activities that the centre can provide.
Exhibition Building
Following along in the public space, one has access to the reception of the ARQUIPÉLAGO located in the main part of the pre-existing building so it can work as hub of pathways and functions. The exhibition spaces are distributed throughout the ground floor and basement, creating a technical corridor that links different environments and functions with a connection between public spaces and service spaces, providing continuity between pathways and functions. Functions are divided by floors in this building with exhibition spaces in the basement and ground floor. On the 1st floor, one will find the library and the education service so they can operate autonomously from the exhibition space but connected to the reception. The administrative services and bar are located on the 2nd floor and connected to the exterior vertical technical area to ensure easy movement and functional autonomy.
Black Box
This building comprises two areas with the main one being located in the centre, the multipurpose hall (multipurpose space) and the space reserved for artists (dressing rooms), and to the south the laboratories for clean, digital and computer techniques and an audio/visual studio.
This space is laid out without a barrier between spectators and artists, placing them in the same space and responding to the versatility that performing arts required today. It is based on the theatre model of the Schaubühne Theatre Company in Berlin, given the transformation possibilities of a full scene room, and on the Lina Bo Bardi Workshop Theatre in São Paulo, given the idea of ‘street theatre’ and the possible relations with the public space. This is a modular space that can be adapted according to each show by combining and adding mobile devices located on the floor and ceiling that are easily assembled and disassembled.
Architectural Design
ARQUIPÉLAGO – CONTEMPORARY ARTS CENTRE
Project co-authored by Francisco Vieira de Campos, Cristina Guedes + João Mendes Ribeiro
2007-2014
The design of the Arquipélago – Contemporary Art Center preserves the industrial character of the facility and thematizes the dialogue between an existing building (former alcohol | tobacco factory) and new spaces (culture factory | art production, reserves, multipurpose room | performing arts, workshops, laboratories, artist workshops).
The project does not exaggerate the difference between the old and new buildings. It rather seeks to unite the different scale and age of its parts through a pictorial manipulation of the form and materiality of buildings – the existing ones marked by visible masonry made of volcanic stone, and the new ones marked by an abstract shape without any reference or suggestion of a language and built in exposed concrete with local basalt aggregates, featuring surfaces with an altimeter and textural finish that complement the full/empty relation of the building mass with the empty courtyards.
The Arquipélago takes its identity from the quiet variation between the existing buildings – containment and minimal action in the strategic deployment of infrastructure channels, maximum efficiency in the spatial and functional hierarchy of the different spaces of the factory complex – and the two new buildings that, by demanding special conditions incompatible with pre-existing structures, solve the problem of required features.
The project is committed to the quality of what pre-existed, bringing into light the typological variations – new buildings are placed alongside existing ones in a ‘serene’ way, clarifying what existed in a given period and what was added to it without harming or misrepresenting the spatial and constructive structures of the complex. Context and proximity contribute to the autonomy of the object.
Spaces
Edifício B – Plantas (pdf)
Edifício C – Plantas (pdf)
Edifício D – Plantas (pdf)
Edifício E – Plantas (pdf)
Edifício F – Plantas (pdf)
Edifício G – Plantas (pdf)
Edifício H – Plantas (pdf)
Measurements/areas of the Arquipélago – Contemporary Art Center
- Building A (shop) – 428.00 m² (renovated building)
- Building B (reserves) – 844.96 m² (new building)
- Building C (artist-in-residence programs) – 1,100.98 m²
- 977.48 m² (renovated building)
- 123.50 m² (new building)
- Building D (exhibition areas, education service and library) – 5,300.91 m² (renovated building)
- Building E (Black Box and Audiovisual and Multimedia Production Centre) – 3,450.45 m² (new building)
- Building F (technical support area) – 379.27 m² (new building)
- Building G (PT) – 21.12 m² (new building)
- Building H (chimney) – 22.11 m² (renovated building)
- Total area of the property – 11,547.80 m² (new and renovated building)
Description of each building:
Building A (shop)
Featuring three levels:
- Level 0 – shop (73.85 m² + 70.60 m² = 144.45 m² – floor space)
- Level 1 – museum centre (152.40 m² + 152.40 m² = 304.80 m² – floor space)
- Level 2 (mezzanine) – office (9.60 m² – floor space)
Building B (reserves)
Featuring two levels:
- Level 0 – reserves (292.00 m²)
- Level 1 – open outdoor area (47.00 m² – sheltered area + 41.00 m² – unsheltered area = 88.00 m² – floor space)
Building C (artist-in-residence programs)
Featuring two levels:
- Level -1 – technical space connecting to building E (50.41 m² + 18.00 m² + 7.95 m² = 76.36 m² – floor space)
- Level 0
- Artist-in-residence programs (152.52 m² + 178.46 m² = 330.98 m² – floor space)
- Loading and unloading bay (74.07 m² – floor space)
- Circulating area (6.14 m² + 15.50 m² = 21.64 m² – floor space)
Building D (exhibition areas, education service and library)
Featuring four levels (-1, 0, 1, 2) and a terrace:
- Level -1 – Basement ( 1,062.97 m² – floor space):
- East wing – 442.60 m²
- Circulating area – 136.22 m²
- West wing – 439.20 m²
- South wing – 44.95 m²
- Level 0 – exhibition area (1,284.52 m² – floor space):
- Assembly, disassembly and maintenance workshop – 145.65 m²
- Reception – 75.35 m²
- Exhibition room 1 – 245.35 m²
- Exhibition room 2 – 183.90 m²
- Exhibition room 3 – 121.81 m²
- Circulating area – 252.56 m² (33.64 + 105.38 + 113.54)
- Artistic cells – 259.90 m² (floor space):
- Artistic cell 1 – 10.32 m²
- Artistic cell 2 – 13.12 m²
- Artistic cell 3 – 11.68 m²
- Artistic cell 4 – 11.68 m²
- Artistic cell 5 – 11.68 m²
- Artistic cell 6 – 9.35 m²
- Artistic cell 7 – 10.39 m²
- Artistic cell 8 – 13.25 m²
- Artistic cell 9 – 11.86 m²
- Artistic cell 10 – 11.85 m²
- Artistic cell 11 – 11.82 m²
- Artistic cell 12 – 9.46 m²
- Artistic cell 13 – 9.38 m²
- Artistic cell 14 – 11.71 m²
- Artistic cell 15 – 11.73 m²
- Artistic cell 16 – 11.79 m²
- Artistic cell 17 – 13.24 m²
- Artistic cell 18 – 10.45 m²
- Artistic cell 19 – 11.75 m²
- Artistic cell 20 – 11.62 m²
- Artistic cell 21 – 11.48 m²
- Artistic cell 22 – 11.38 m²
- Artistic cell 23 – 11.43 m²
- Artistic cell 24 – 9.16 m²
- Level 1 – Education Service and Library (471.29 m² – floor space):
- Education Service – 239.24 m²
- Library – 232.05 m²
- Level 2 – Administrative service and Bar / Cafeteria (422.25 m² – floor space):
- Administrative service – 210.09 m²
- Bar / Cafeteria – 98.20 m² + terrace – 117.00 m²
- Circulating area – 113.96 m²
Building E (Black Box – multipurpose room + Audiovisual and Multimedia Production Centre)
Featuring 4 levels (-1, 0, 1, 2):
- Level -1 (Technical area):
- Artist workshop – 161.50 m²
- Understage – 256.00 m²
- Level 0 (multipurpose room and technical area):
- Foyer – 42.00 m²
- Multipurpose Room (Black Box) – 263.00 m²
- Technical area – 85.90 m²
- Level 1 (Dressing rooms and offices of the Audiovisual and Multimedia Centre)
- Dressing rooms – 50.50 m² + terrace – 23.30 m²
- Audiovisual and Multimedia Centre – 182.90 m²
- Level 2 (Dressing rooms and offices of the Audiovisual and Multimedia Centre):
- Dressing rooms – 50.50 m²
- Audiovisual and Multimedia Centre – 125.35 m²
Relatório de Atividades
De acordo com a resolução n.º 100/2003 de 31 de julho, pretende este relatório apurar e estabelecer, para o Arquipélago – Centro de Artes Contemporâneas , os objetivos alcançados, o grau de realização das atividades previstas e os recursos utilizados na prossecução dos objetivos/atividades nos anos compreendidos entre 2015 a 2022.
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