Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

Japanese architects Junya Ishigami + Associates and Dutch studio MAKS have won a competition to co-design a visitor centre for a nineteenth century park in the north of the Netherlands.

Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

The proposals for Park Groot Vijversburg include the renovation of an existing villa, new greenhouses and an outdoor stage.

Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

The visitor centre is conceived at the intersection of three pathways through the park and will feature curved walls that continue the lines of these routes.

Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

The renovated park is scheduled to complete in 2014 and will also include a 15-hectare extension designed by a team of landscape architects.

Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

Junya Ishigami recently filled an exhibition room with an invisible installation – watch a movie about it here.

Park Groot Vijversburg by Junya Ishigami + Associates and MAKS

Here’s some more text from MAKS:


Junya.Ishigami + Associates and MAKS / Marieke Kums have been selected for a set of architectural interventions for Park Groot Vijversburg in Tytsjerk, The Netherlands.

Park Groot Vijversburg, located in the north of Holland was established in the 19th century and contains a rich history of flora and fauna. A historical villa is centrally placed in the park. Throughout the year, the park hosts many events such as international exhibitions of contemporary art, musical performances, church services and excursions.

The goal is to design a new visitor center, renovate the historical villa, develop a floating stage for performances, and create glasshouses for the botanical gardens.

One of our main proposals is a visitor center, positioned next to the historical villa. In plan, the form is as if pulled tightly in three directions while maintaining a required main hall.

As the main hall stretches, it gradually becomes a path – naturally transforming into a park trail. This slowly pulled wing loses its quality of interior space as one progresses along it, leaving only its wall, until it finally disappears into the park environment.

In this way, the building establishes a large scale similar to that of the generous park, and at the same time, the enclosed space provides small scale ambiance and intimacy. This is our aspiration for the new visitor center.

This building is an architectural project, but it also can be imagined as part of the landscape.
The visitor center, along with the other projects, is planned for completion in 2014.

Parallel to the above projects, a Dutch team of LOLA Landscape, Deltavormgroep and Piet Oudolf will design a 15 hectares extension to the park. Tobias Rehberger, a German artist, was selected to create a second park extension including several new works of art.

Architects: Junya ishigami + Associates and MAKS / Marieke Kums
Location: Tytsjerk, The Netherlands
All engineering: ABT B.V.
Building area: 1,000 m2
Program: Visitor center / auditorium / gallery, meeting spaces & offices, green houses, performance areas

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

Japanese architect Junya Ishigami has created an installation of chairs wearing crocheted clothes at Interieur 2010 in Kortrijk, Belgium.

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

Called Picnic, the project features furniture Ishigami designed for Italian brand Living Divani.

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

Ishigami is the guest of honour at this year’s Interieur 2010, which continues until 24 October.

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

The information that follows is from Interieur 2010:


‘A number of different chairs with various kinds of upholstery and dressing, create a background for people, friends or family to come together and celebrate. Chairs embrace or turn away from each other, or form a line and hold hands. They may even form a circle around the garden. Distorted chairs around the table look like a family talking to each other and enjoying the table… Table and chairs are installed in the space as if to create a scene of nature, or crowds of people.

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

Usually, furniture is considered a tool for people, and it can become no more than a background within the space. Here, I want to propose celebratory furniture that blends in with the activity of people and into the surrounding environment. It will be joyful furniture picnic.’

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

There is a debate going on nowadays in the design press about design conservatism vs. more progressive and playful approaches. Because Interieur is not defensive in its attitude about design, it has opted for an open vision about the broad themes of the new world of design and architecture.

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

The young architect Junya Ishigami is a good fit within this vision. He is the best pupil of architect Kazuyo Sejima (Sanaa) who was invited to INTERIEUR 04. During the past few years, Ishigami has begun a search for the limits of lightness and whiteness, where form and technology, architecture and engineering meet and reinforce each other. His architectural creativity borders on the wonderful and his engineering inventiveness means that each new project is bound to be unusual and surprising.

Picnic by Junya Ishigami

Our Japanese Guest of Honour Junya Ishigami will introduce his new, light and white world at INTERIEUR 2010, where dream and reality will meet. His PICNIC project, an installation for the Design Biennale INTERIEUR 2010, is especially different, beautiful and fascinating. With its Japanese Guest of Honour, INTERIEUR 2010 dips its toes in a new world of architecture and design, a world where there is room for poetry, precision, technology and art.


See also:

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Kait Workshop by
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Stream of Light by Olivia Lee
and Alienor de Chambrier
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