BBVA Stadium
50,000 m2 of Green Infrastructure
What used to be a sanitary landfill that received the municipal garbage along the La Silla River, has become the first LEED-certified stadium in Mexico and Latin America. With more than 1300 m2 of rain gardens that filter the rainwater on site and 3.7 hectares of parking spaces planted with grass, the grounds of the Stadium are transformed into an impressive urban forest and public park, planted with more than a thousand native trees of large size extending its influence and design towards a linear park of more than 20 km along the La Silla river, the stadium project will regenerate and clean the river margins, damaged by the hurricanes, connecting the various low income habitated areas (some slums) and other public parks in the area. This now has become the largest metropolitan public park in Monterrey Metro area.
See more +
Keywords
Innovation / Water Efficiency / Sustainable / Sociability
Awards
Leed Certificate Platinum
Scope
Urban Design / Landscape Architecture
Location
Guadalupe, Nuevo León, MX
Details
Architecture: Populous
Size: 3.7 hectares
Year: 2015
Innovative elements in the landscape
Interconnected Systems
It uses prefabricated systems of “rain gardens” vegetated and tree trenches, armed with “designed” soils and interconnected drainage system.
Permeable Parking
Massive use of the “grass pave” system for a total ###m2 of permeable parking spaces that minimizes the heat island effect
Environmental Impact
Planted 1,162 native trees from 3 to 10” that cause 64,155 m2 of shade over the total surface, and process 25,564 kg of Carbon Dioxide per year.
High efficiency
High-efficiency drip irrigation system that uses 100% treated sewage from the city's municipal network and use of native species with low water consumption and maintenance
Enhancing User Experience
The bollards and modular concrete benches were produced in a controlled plant environment, where precision and consistency were fundamental. Through the use of automated fabrication processes, variations in color, texture, and structural performance were minimized, ensuring uniformity across all elements. This approach guaranteed durability and resistance, essential for high-traffic public environments such as the stadium surroundings.
Process
The stadium's landscape process began with a deep environmental analysis of the La Silla River basin. The challenge was to transform a former landfill into a high-performance ecosystem. This involved a multidisciplinary team of biologists and urban designers working together to ensure that every square meter of the project contributed to local biodiversity.
See more +
Contact
Want to apply for a position?
Fill in this form and our team will contact you!
©HLA
Phone
Newsletter
Distrito Armida, Av Lázaro Cárdenas 303, Haciendas de La Sierra, 66260 San Pedro Garza García, N.L.
+52 81 8378 4876
contacto@hararilandscape.mx