Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Belgian architects Pieterjan Gijs and Arnout Van Vaerenbergh have completed a see-through church in Limburg, Belgium.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

The ten metre-high church is constructed from 100 stacked layers of weathered steel plates.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Gaps between these plates allow visitors to through through the walls.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

With its pointed spire, the building imitates the form of traditional churches in the region.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Entitled Reading between the Lines, the project forms part of the Z-OUT programme coordinated by the Z33 gallery, which aims to bring art into public space.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Gijs Van Vaerenbergh were also responsible for creating an upside dome inside an existing church in Leuven – see our earlier story here.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Photography is by Kristof Vrancken.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

Here are some more details from Gijs Van Vaerenbergh:


Gijs Van Vaerenbergh makes church sculpture as part of art in public space project

Gijs Van Vaerenbergh, a collaboration between young Belgian architects Pieterjan Gijs and Arnout Van Vaerenbergh, have built a see-through church in the Belgian region of Haspengouw. The church is a part of the Z-OUT project of Z33, house for contemporary art based in Hasselt, Belgium. Z-OUT is an ambitious long-term art in public space project that will be realised on different locations in the Flemish region of Limburg over the next five years.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

The church is 10 meters high and is made of 100 layers and 2000 columns of steel. Depending on the perspective of the viewer, the church is either perceived as a massive building or seems to dissolve – partly or entirely – in the landscape. On the other hand, looking at the landscape from within the church, the surrounding countryside is redefined by abstract lines.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

The design of the church is based on the architecture of the multitude of churches in the region, but through the use of horizontal plates, the concept of the traditional church is transformed into a transparent object of art.

Reading between the Lines by Gijs Van Vaerenbergh

The project is called ‘Reading between the Lines’ and is a project by the duo Gijs Van Vaerenbergh, a collaboration between young Belgian architects Pieterjan Gijs (Leuven, 1983) and Arnout Van Vaerenbergh (Leuven, 1983).Since 2007, they have been realizing projects in the public space that derive from their architectural background, but clearly display an artistic intention. As such, their projects do not always originate from the customary commission and carry a large degree of autonomy. Their primary concerns are experiment, reflection, a physical involvement with the end result and the input of the viewer.


See also:

.

Shiv Temple by Sameep
Padora & Associates
Church
by Beton
Sta Columbina Chapel by
Luis Ferreira Rodrigues

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Paris architects Nadau Lavergne have completed a rusted steel winery on a World Heritage Site in the south of France.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The Chateau Barde-Haut winery in Saint-Emilion comprises two Corten steel blocks, one of which nestles between two existing stone buildings with matching pitched roofs.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A two-storey building with a chunky-concrete frame and timber cladding is concealed inside one of the warehouse blocks.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Vintage barrels of wine are stored behind glass screens on the ground floor of this internal building.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Above is a room that overlooks the warehouse floor.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Hot air pumps regulate the temperature inside the buildings.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

We also recently featured a story about refurbished wine cellars in Spain – see our earlier story here and see all our stories about wineries here.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Photography is by Philippe Caumes.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The following text is from Nadau Lavergne:


Composes in time

The Chateau Barde-Haut is a 17-hectare domain situated in Saint-Emilion, at the end of the tray.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Registered in 1999 on the UNESCO world heritage, the jurisdiction of Saint-Emilion is a remarkable example of a historic wine landscape, which survived intact. In 2005, we had rehabilitated of former winery in a building of traditional stone.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Sought again in 2008 for a project of a bigger scale. The existing site is characteristic of the form of the Gironde wine landscape: an island of stone low houses of the 19th century, contain offices and the other dependences, appear from rows of vineyards. In the North of this island gets loose a volume everything in length: the wine storehouse.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The project takes advantage of this architectural context which makes the identity of the country. We would have certainly been able to work a rather linear architectural coherence, to answer the justifiable expectations of a landscape the timeless face of which is security of a tradition.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Nevertheless, the identity of a country is not dependent on an architectural gesture which would content with reproducing the characteristics of the existing. In a time when the business of the wine becomes international, where the French production is competed by foreign wines, the wine country of Saint-Emilion remains a strong entity, both for the beauty of its landscapes and for the brilliance of its naming.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The production of the wine is a tradition multimillennium; this secularity hires it in an era today which was able to frighten the profession. Of new requirements in term of fermentation and wine making, the expectations of warned customers, a necessary export, so many signs of the inescapable modernization of the viniculture. How to reconcile from then on the identity of a ground, its exception and its stamp and the technical innovations?

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The choice of contemporary architecture answers this visible contradiction. Two volumes rise on the existing site: on one hand workshops, the configuration of which in length allows to structure the entire space of the site and to redesign the roads; on the other hand cuviers and reception hall, which skip in the hollow of the space left by stony buildings. Both get dressed of sheets of rusty steel, the aspect of which metamorphoses according to climates; the volumes hurry of nuances pastels, ochre and sienna.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The choice of this material was imperative(led) with a certain evidence: the strength of the place required architecture in the asserted minimalism, the architectural presence which did not think in term of competition or rivalry, but dynamics. The existing wine storehouse and the workshops had been dug to mitigate the leveling of the ground.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A dynamic contact of the architectures.

Noting the configuration of the built, and quite particularly this space between the wine storehouse and the very dense set towards, the project thus comes to fit partly into the stony case; the welcoming volume cuviers and reception hall skips between the traditional buildings, the witnesses of a secular memory. Its facade is aligns itself with the line of built existing (wine storehouse and diverse dependences); it marries the length of the wine storehouse to present on the West a facade which fits on the width of the building. So by overlaying this volume in the pronounced lines, as cut from the corten steel, from the stony heart, we wished to open up the architectures.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

This unexpected closeness of a contemporary building and one built traditional, their contact, create an interesting dynamics. An interaction which authorizes a new story; The identity of every sequence is as raised by the unusual presence of the other architectural temporality. An attention on the temporality being inspired by the alchemy which shapes the character of a wine, a mouthful of which lets guess the spring rains, the burning sun of August, the wooded accents of the oak.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The architectural lines of the project borrow their simplicity and their dynamics from wefts of the rows) of vineyards. The cover of rusty steel which dresses both buildings creates a visual coherence and declines the colors of the country. However a strong identity characterizes each of them.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

Canadian wells were dug along the line of built formed by the wine storehouse, the volume contains cuviers and reception hall, and the existing stony buildings. They allow to reduce the thermal amplitudes for the internal spaces of the wine storehouse and the cuvier. Hot air pumps, settled in studios (workshops), distribute the air(sight) chill and regulate the process. Buildings (ships) are isolated around for an optimal thermal slowness.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

The végétalisée roof that covers workshops has three different functions it favours the insertion of the contemporary volume in the site; it contributes its slowness by strengthening the insulation; she allows finally to filter rainwater, which are got back. Wine-producing waters are handled, managed towards a water-treatment plant. A wind turbine fixed to the roof of workshops enlightens the outside.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A volume dug in the ground.

Workshops, directed east-west, consist of 4 sequences indicated by the play of the roof, the division of which in visible accordion in facade revisits the industrial architecture of the 1950s. Inside, the first three sequences communicate between them (from north to south: workshop(studio), premises and cloakrooms(changing rooms), shelter material two high doors of panels of steel lacquered on rails open in the East. The last sequence is a huge room for vintagers, whose inside gets dressed of wood.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

A wide plate glass window totally opens the space on a wooden terrace; it cuts a panoramic centring on the valley of Saint-Emilion. Half-buried in the North to mitigate the leveling of the ground, the whole building presents a favorable thermal slowness, to which contributes the presence of a vegetalized roof.

Chateau Barde-Haut by Nadau Lavergne

In the North, a wind turbine fixed to a hurt metallic structure allows to feed all the outside lighting. It indicates the presence of the building which seems to go out gradually of the ground. The vegetalized roof plays with the singular topography of the ground, by creating the illusion of a building dug in the ground.


See also:

.

Wine Cellars for Vega-Sicilia
by Salas Studio
Faustino Winery by
Foster + Partners
Bodegas Protos by Rogers
Stirk Harbour + Partners

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos have completed an underground museum in Spain with weathered steel towers and cylinders that emerge above a grass lawn (photographs by Roland Halbe and Fernando Alda).

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Top and above: photography by Roland Halbe

The Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo exhibits objects, images and films that illustrate the historic Roman city and province.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Above: photography by Fernando Alda

Visitors enter the building via a spiralling staircase that descends into a submerged circular courtyard.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Above: photography by Fernando Alda

Three cylindrical towers provide enclosed rooms for audio-visual installations and are surrounded by the underground exhibition galleries.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Above: photography by Fernando Alda

Parking for cars and buses is also provided underneath the landscape.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Above: photography by Roland Halbe

Weathered steel has featured in a few recent Dezeen stories – see our earlier stories about a canopy of flattened parasols and a museum pierced by bullet-sized holes.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Above: photography by Roland Halbe

This is the third museum by Spanish architects Nieto Sobejano featured on Dezeen this summer, following one with a perforated aluminium skin and another in a ruined castlesee all our stories about Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos here.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Above: photography by Roland Halbe

Fernando Alda shows more photographs of this project on his website.

Here is some more text from the architects:


Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo
1st Prize Competition 2007

The building site, which until not long ago housed industrial structures- is located in a position relatively displaced from the historic centre of Lugo. However, it will soon become a point of arrival for visitors to the city.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

It may well seem awkward to assimilate architecture into landscape, but this is one of the cases in which we would like to think that the relationship between the two is more than a set phrase. We propose a museum-park or a park-museum, which will be linked to the sequence of green areas in the city, hiding the parking areas underground and emerging in a constellation of cylindrical lanterns scattered throughout a continuous green field.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

As it happens every time an architectural idea is intended to be built –which very frequently emerges from intuition-, it is the analysis of the program and its location that causes the specific proposal to make sense. We will divide the program into two large, connected areas: the parking and the visitor centre. The strong difference in height between the East and West ends of the building site suggests the possibility of taking +444m as an average reference level, in such a way that the garage is developed nearly at street level, thus remaining half-buried.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

The Visitor Centre is essentially organised on a single floor illuminated through large circular courtyards, which allow natural light to penetrate and permit independent, controlled use. From the main courtyard, the most peculiar and tallest exhibition rooms will emerge -as contemporary cylindrical bastions-, which will become the image of the new building which is projected towards the exterior.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

The exhibiting area has been conceived from two types of spaces: one which is neutral, flexible, suitable for the exhibition of panels, and will contain interactive modules or glass cabinets with original pieces; the other is defined by three cylindrical bastions, which are peculiar spaces due to their shape and dimension, suitable for audiovisual installations and projections. Both the Museum and the Visitor Centre are articulated in a sequence of interior and exterior spaces with multiple itineraries in which the landscape and History will be able to convey the intimate link that unites them.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

Awareness towards environmental issues is a consequence of the project’s conception itself. The strong impact that a large amount of vehicles -cars and buses- would have produced on the surface is avoided by hiding the parking area under the undulating cover of vegetation. Likewise, the spaces destined for visitors and the museum occupy a half-buried floor under the same green foliage, which favours thermal inertia, thus reducing the need for energy contribution.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

The exhibition towers emerging from the garden will be externally re-covered by a light, metallic skin, which will accommodate the incorporation of solar panels and night-time lighting in its design, by way of a contemporary interpretation of the Roman wall’s bastions.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

The new Museum will entail the experience of a walk through a vegetative, metallic landscape, a luminous field whose night-time glow will seem to emerge from within the earth. The Lugo Museum will evoke images of fields and caves, walls and fortified towers –metaphors of a landscape and a culture that the inhabitants of Lugo carry within their own memory.

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

Location: Avda. Infanta Elena. Lugo. Spain
Client: Ayuntamiento de Lugo
Architects: Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos, S.L.P. – Fuensanta Nieto, Enrique Sobejano

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image

Project Architect: Alexandra Sobral
Proyect Coordination: Vanesa Manrique
Collaborators: Borja Ruiz-Apilánez, Juan Carlos Redondo, Bart de Beer, Rocío Domínguez
Site Supervision: Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos, S.L.P. – Fuensanta Nieto, Enrique Sobejano
Miguel Mesas Izquierdo, Technical Architect
Structure: NB 35 S.L.
Mechanical Engineer: 3i Ingeniería Industrial, S.L.
Models: Juan de Dios Hernández – Jesús Rey, Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos, S.L.P.
Project: 2007
Construction: 2008-2011
Construction Company: U.T.E. Aldesa – Cuadernas

Interactive Museum of the History of Lugo by Nieto Sobejano Arquitectos

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Riverside Museum
by Zaha Hadid
Roku Museum by Hiroshi
Nakamura & NAP
Celtic Museum by
Kada Wittfeld Architektur