Mirrors Plaza | Bla! Estudio Creativo + Abarca Palma Arquitectos

Mirrors Plaza is an urban infrastructure project resulting from a Public and Private articulation that includes 4 basic elements for its development: an existing square, a floor painting, new urban furniture, and a cover. All of this generates dynamism and unexpected uses in the residual space of our city.

Mirrors Plaza

© Gonzalo Zuñiga

The existing square corresponds to the Municipality of Las Condes in the city of Santiago and was chosen for this project due to its condition as a “residual space” resulting from the works of the underground section of Manquehue Avenue that passes below this square, which caused an “urban island”, a triangle in the middle of three highly transited avenues with almost no pedestrian connection. In addition, this square presented a series of elements that had to be considered in the design: an empty space between eight concrete planters with a tree each and the pavement composed of tiles arranged geometrically in an orthogonal layout.

Mirrors Plaza

© Gonzalo Zuñiga

The floor painting is arranged within this pre-existing layout, generating a new triangular and trapezoidal geometry of multiple colors that takes as reference a series of Pantones provided by the automotive brand SEAT, which, as a form of advertising and brand positioning, represent the various colors of the Barcelona sky, the city of origin of this brand.

Mirrors Plaza

© Felipe Ugalde

The new urban furniture, built with plywood panels, is understood as an extrusion of this new geometry caused by the floor painting, considering 3 levels of height that serve for multiple unplanned activities such as sitting, eating, conversing, gathering, dancing, jumping, playing, skating, singing, in short, a stage for various activities. This furniture occupies the axis or center of the space intervened by means of an intermittent line of various heights and three colors: red, orange, and yellow.

Mirrors Plaza

© Felipe Ugalde

The steel cover is arranged according to the empty space and the planters with the trees, thus generating 6 support pillars located at the axis of 6 planters, in order to continue with the empty condition of the space, but this time contained and protected by a roof that provides shade, and an interaction and stimulation with people and the other elements of the square (floor mural and furniture), through the use of reflective stainless steel as a coating for the sky of the cover, thus generating a dynamic and abstract use between people and the elements of the square, which takes as reference the Vieux port de Marseille by architect Norman Foster and the Mercats del Encants de Barcelona by architects b720 and Fermín Vázquez.

Mirrors Plaza

© Felipe Ugalde

The shape of the roof is also conditioned by the planters, as the water discharges for the rainy season fall directly onto the trees due to the direction of their inclination and a gutter that leads the water to the trees, thus generating the recirculation of rainwater that falls on the roof for the watering of the trees. The colors of the roof respond to the concept of the fifth facade due to the high-rise buildings surrounding this area.

Project Info
Architects: Abarca Palma Arquitectos, Bla! Estudio Creativo
Country: Chile, Las Condes
Area: 180 m²
Year: 2022
Photographs:Gonzalo Zuñiga, Felipe Ugalde
Lead Architects: Abarca + Palma (Francisco Abarca, Camilo Palma, Sebastián Ochoa).
Collaborating Architect: Baltazar Acuña
Creative Direction: Bla! Estudio (Felipe Zegers y Payo Söchting)
Structural Engineering: Sebastián Cárcamo
Floor Painting: Bla! + Benjamín Contador
Program: Plaza
Client: Seat Chile
Sponsor: Municipalidad de Las Condes

Madeline Brooks
Show full profile Madeline Brooks

Madeline Brooks is a Projects Editor at Arch2O, where she has been shaping and refining architectural content since March 2024. With over a decade of experience in editorial work, she has curated, revised, and published an array of projects covering architecture, urbanism, and public space design. A graduate of the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Madeline brings a strong academic foundation and a discerning editorial eye to each piece she oversees. Since joining Arch2O, she has played a pivotal role in shaping the platform’s editorial direction, with a focus on sustainability, social relevance, and cutting-edge design. Madeline excels at translating complex architectural ideas into clear, engaging stories that resonate with both industry professionals and general readers. She works closely with architects, designers, and global contributors to ensure every project is presented with clarity, depth, and compelling visual narrative. Her editorial leadership continues to elevate Arch2O’s role in global architectural dialogue.

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