Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
Masterplan & Sports Complex La Paz | © Jaime Navarro

In La Paz, Baja California Sur, the transformation of El Cajoncito, a neglected dry riverbed central to the city’s stormwater system, marks a strategic urban intervention led by CCA | Bernardo Quinzaños. The Masterplan La Paz addresses the fragmented nature of the city’s spatial fabric by reconceiving this infrastructural void as a connective civic spine. The project is not merely about landscape or recreation; it functions as an integrated ecological, hydrological, and social framework.

Masterplan & Sports Complex La Paz Technical Information

We envisioned the Masterplan La Paz not just as infrastructure, but as a catalyst for social integration, where public space becomes a bridge between ecological resilience and community well-being.

– Bernardo Quinzaños

Masterplan & Sports Complex La Paz Photographs

Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Jaime Navarro
© Jaime Navarro

Reframing the Urban Void: Context and Design Intent

The master plan is rooted in a clear intention: to bridge socio-spatial divides and enhance resilience in a region highly susceptible to seasonal flooding. El Cajoncito, which becomes impassable during the rainy season, historically reinforced urban disconnection. Residents of adjacent neighborhoods were required to circumvent it by traveling between four and eight kilometers despite the separation being no more than 200 meters. The master plan reconceives this gap not as a barrier but as an opportunity to integrate infrastructure and urban life.

Informed by a collaborative process involving technical consultants, municipal authorities, and the local community, the project articulates infrastructure as a tool for civic repair. Public space, mobility, and water management are synthesized into a singular spatial proposal, creating a precedent for interventions in Latin American secondary cities facing similar socio-environmental challenges.

Masterplan & Sports Complex La Paz Spatial Strategy

At the heart of the project is a linear spatial strategy that reorients movement and redefines thresholds within the city. The Paseo Lineal, a continuous pedestrian and cycling path, forms the connective tissue of the master plan. Stretching from the city’s marina to the new sports complex, this spine is both infrastructural and ecological. It incorporates rainwater mitigation systems, shaded rest areas, and integrated bus shelters, creating a multimodal corridor that prioritizes non-motorized transport and public transit.

A critical architectural gesture within this system is the bridge that spans El Cajoncito. It addresses the acute lack of connectivity by enabling direct, safe passage between neighborhoods, fundamentally altering local movement patterns. Rather than serving as an isolated object, the bridge is embedded in a network of social and ecological flows.

The project avoids monofunctional zoning and instead embraces layered programming that intersperses recreational, cultural, and environmental uses. This pluralism is essential to its success as a public space. The spatial organization acknowledges the diversity of its users, from athletes and children to commuters and spectators, ensuring the infrastructure supports everyday and exceptional activities.

Architectural Language and Material Intelligence

The Conjunto Deportivo La Paz forms a key anchor of the master plan. Its architecture is defined by modularity, climatic responsiveness, and material economy. The baseball pavilions, arranged as four repeated units, are designed with variations in field size and complexity to accommodate a wide range of users, from young children to professional-level athletes. The modular approach streamlines construction while allowing for phased expansion.

Material decisions respond directly to the site’s climatic conditions. Steel frames provide structural clarity and durability, while open facades and ridge vents enable passive cross-ventilation. Shaded seating areas and integrated benches serve spectators and athletes, offering thermal comfort in the region’s high temperatures. These elements are not ornamental but spatial devices rooted in environmental performance and user comfort.

The multipurpose building further expands the programmatic scope. Two offset gabled volumes house classrooms, offices, a library, and spaces for cultural activities such as dance and music. The flexible structure supports simultaneous functions without formal separation and encourages informal overlaps and civic interaction. Its open-air double-height space is a community forum that blurs the boundary between the building and the plaza.

The architectural language is intentionally restrained. The use of organic forms in certain shaded structures softens the sports complex’s visual rigidity and fosters a more approachable atmosphere without compromising programmatic clarity.

Infrastructure as a Social Catalyst

The project’s impact extends beyond physical infrastructure. By decentralizing public amenities, the masterplan challenges the historic concentration of civic life along La Paz’s malecón. The project redistributes access to recreation, culture, and mobility by repositioning investment in underrepresented neighborhoods.

Since its opening, the sports complex has functioned as a venue and a civic platform. It accommodates various events, including tournaments and cultural festivals, activating the site throughout the day and seasons. Providing official-quality baseball fields is particularly significant in a city with a strong sporting culture but limited infrastructure. The center fosters intergenerational engagement and strengthens communal ties.

The Masterplan La Paz exemplifies how architecture, when embedded in broader territorial and social strategies, can exceed form-making limits. It demonstrates that infrastructural projects, often perceived as technical or neutral, can instead serve as active instruments for equity, resilience, and civic expression. The work of CCA | Bernardo Quinzaños offers a thoughtful model for integrating architecture and landscape into the city’s life, not through spectacle but through the careful choreography of space, structure, and use.

Masterplan & Sports Complex La Paz Plans

Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Planta Masterplan
Master Plan | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Planta Paseo Lineal y Puente
Master Plan | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
Masterplan La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Planta Puente
Bridge Floor Plan | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
Conjunto Deportivo La Paz CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños Planta Conjunto
Master Plan | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
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Floor Plan | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
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Section | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
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Elevation | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños
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Section | © CCA I Bernardo Quinzaños

Masterplan & Sports Complex La Paz Image Gallery

About CCA | Bernardo Quinzaños

CCA | Bernardo Quinzaños is a Mexico City-based architecture studio led by architect Bernardo Quinzaños. The firm focuses on socially driven and contextually responsive design, strongly emphasizing public infrastructure, urban regeneration, and environmental resilience. Through multidisciplinary collaborations and community engagement, CCA develops projects that integrate architecture with broader cultural and ecological systems.

Credits and Additional Notes
  1. Lead Architect: Bernardo Quinzaños

  2. Design Team: Santiago Vélez, Begoña Manzano, Andrés Suárez, Carlos Molina, Cristian Nieves, Miguel Izaguirre, Sara de la Cabada, André Torres, Abigaíl Zavaleta, Víctor Zúñiga, Pablo Ruiz, Scarlett Díaz

  3. Client: SEDATU (Secretaría de Desarrollo Agrario, Territorial y Urbano), Municipality of La Paz

  4. Builder: HABA, Alan Haro

  5. Photographer: Jaime Navarro

  6. Video Production: Jaime Navarro Estudio, Ricardo Esquivel, Fernanda Ventura