Abstract

The Galician Centre of Contemporary Art (Santiago de Compostela, Spain) is a large, modern building finished with a granitic cladding. Completed in September 1993, it is already showing signs of deterioration, including biological colonization and intense blackening of exterior surfaces, and the breaking off of cladding. In this work we investigated the causes of this premature deterioration. Biological colonization was most intense on the lower areas of shaded walls, the most abundant organisms being the lichens Trapelia coarctata and T. involuta. The blackening was chiefly due to the build up of microorganisms or their remains (no elements indicative of atmospheric pollution were detected). Both the cladding and granite from the source quarry showed signs of severe weathering (fissuration, high porosity, the presence of kaolinite) and had high capillarity, rapidly absorbing large amounts of water and releasing it only slowly. Because of this and the wet climate in Santiago the cladding was almost permanently damp, which, together with its weathered condition, made it highly bioreceptive and, at the same time, reduced its mechanical resistance, making it susceptible to breakage.

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