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FEM Stadium

Location:

Laoag City, Ilocos Norte

Plot Area:

17,848 SQM

Storeys:

2

Year:

Floor Area:

Status:

2019

4,691 SQM

Completed

The Ferdinand E. Marcos Stadium is a 12,000 capacity track and field stadium in Laoag City that serves as the primary social space for the people of Ilocos Norte. The stadium is located at the heart of the city adjacent to the Mariano Marcos State University and opposite the Rizal Park.

The main feature of the stadium is its open southern end, where an open amphitheatre and sloping lawn leads towards Rizal Park. The open stadium allows for free and unfettered access for everyone and critically expands the existing public open space inside the city by 200%. This allows it to serve not just as a sports and events venue, but also as an extension of the park and a daily destination for both students and residents.

The stadium's remarkable urban regeneration shines through its transformation. From its decayed origins and desolate state, the stadium is now a bustling park for sports and leisure, honoring local talents and historical significance. The project catalyzed a renewal, not just of physical structures, but of community vitality. The eastern side that used to be a road now becomes a promenade that connects us with the university where students could freely enter and turns the stadium into part of the campus, the underside of the seats cover warm up tracks that are free for the public's use.On weekdays, students from Mariano Marcos University now gravitate towards it before and after class, while weekends draw families for picnics and leisurely strolls. This illustration shows such spaces can revitalize neighborhoods, acting as bridges connecting urban and rural inhabitants.

The minimalist and distinct geometry of an open bowl is defined by the corrugated PVC exterior wall and canopy that reflects the corrugated metal roofs of most local homes. This is carried by clean-cut curving steel columns that bend and narrow into the canopy rafters. The external skin is a celebration of the Ilokano Abel fabric that is considered as an essential part of their life cycle. From birth, infants are wrapped in Abel, in adulthood, they use it in weddings, in death, they use it to wrap the departed ones. The process of making this fabric is passed down from generation to generation and preserves the llokanos' character and identity. The "Binakol' or whirlwind pattern creates a human scale that can be easily recognized by its uniform interlocking geometric patterns that results into a traditional optical illusion that represents the waves of the sea and protects against malevolent spirits.

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