If Charlie, the hero of the children's book of R. Dal, and tried to imagine how the chocolate factory should look, he hardly thought that it would look like that. Although, maybe he just never went to Mexico.
When the Mexican architect Michael Roikind was asked to design a new interior of the Nestle chocolate factory for visitors who visit her every day, he suggested creating a new complex in which visitors could learn about the history of this sweetness obtained from cocoa beans.
The proposal was met positively, and Roikind and his team immediately got down to business. The design and construction of the complex took all two and a half months - faster than any on-line project in China. The complex is a horizontal sculptural structure and is located near the main motorway leading to Paseo Tollocan.
It quickly became a local landmark, and tourists are already brought here. The complex stands on concrete columns that lift it above the ground. The walls are a bizarre polyhedron, no less fascinating with its abstractness both outside and inside. The museum has a room for children, a shop and a theater.
Outside, this slightly looping structure looks like a giant abstraction caterpillar made of red steel. You will say, where is the factory? Do not worry, it can be accessed directly from the museum, both buildings are connected. Tells the magazine Wallpaper.