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:

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

Centre d’Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

These photographs by Julien Lanoo show a French driving-test centre by Samuel Delmas Architectes, which is camouflaged to look like a fence.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Weathered rods of Corten steel surround the exterior of the Centre d’Examen du Permis, interrupted by black-framed box windows.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

This screen provides solar shading for the glazed, prefabricated building while fences in the same material extend to either side.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Framed porches project from two sides of the centre to provide separate entrances for staff and the public.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

The architects raised the building off the ground since the site in Gennevilliers, a suburb to the north-west of Paris, is prone to flooding.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

More photography by Julien Lanoo on Dezeen »

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

The following text is provided by the architects:


Ioclimatic approach

To build in an easily flooded zone, a friendly and a warm edifice in an HEQ way of thinking while assuring the safety of the site and the longevity of the project.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Site, brief and project

The project takes place along the boulevard. It is used as an acces filter for the tracks thanks to its openwork envelope.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

The fence on the boulevard uses the facade system and improves its presence on the way while developping a kinetic effect when you are driving all along the building.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

The building skin is constituted of vertical elements, made of strips of timber or metalic slats, regularly spaced according to their function.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

The envelope was made in order to solve all the constraints depending of the brief and of the site: solar protection, intimity, modularity of the building, prefabrication, anti-intervention, anti-vandal, environmental approach…

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Building & sustainable development

Simple and rigorous volumes allow the optimisation of the way of building, the rationalization of the structure, of the envelope and of the networks.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Implementation of windbreak hedges composed of local species with persistent foliage. Preservation of the existing vegetation. Development of a biodiversity in relation with the site (humid environment).

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

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Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

The drainage ditches allow to rid the water of pollution thanks to a system using plants.

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

Brief examination center for driving licence + projection room + documentation + cafeteria + exhibition room + offices + tracks and parking

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

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Site location Gennevilliers 92, France
Contracting authority Ministère de l’écologie, du développement durable, des transports et du logement – DDE 92
Av B. Frachon 92 000 Nanterre 01 56 38 29 80
Project manager a+ samueldelmas
Net floor area 580 m²+23 000 m² landscaping
Construction costs 2 250 000 euros excl tax
Calendar – delivered in April 2011
Prize-winner of the competition

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

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Outside spaces delivered in May 2009
Building delivered in April 2011

+ very high-performance Energy
+ puits canadien (earth cooling tubes)
+ solar filter

Centre d'Examen du Permis by Samuel Delmas Architectes

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See also:

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Versailles Pavilion by
Explorations Architecture
Kindergarten Kekec by
Arhitektura Jure Kotnik
Extension to Residence
Königswarte by Plasma Studio

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski Architect

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

Manhattan firm Andre Kikosi Architect installed a folding Corten steel façade to transform this disused New York warehouse into a market and music venue.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

The motorised façade of The Wyckoff Exchange is made up of five panels, which fold outwards to shelter the pavement and reveal a glass skin beneath.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

LED lights hidden within perforations on the metal sheets give the building a glowing effect at night, when the shutters provide protection for the shops inside.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

The building houses a live music and performance venue, an organic food market and boutique wine shop.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

More projects by Andre Kikoski Architect  on Dezeen »
More architecture on Dezeen »

Here’s some more information from the architects:


ANDRE KIKOSKI ARCHITECT DESIGNS INNOVATIVE RETAIL BUILDING IN BROOKLYN, NEW YORK

Emerging Architecture Firm Transforms Abandoned Warehouse with Cutting-Edge Façade

The Wyckoff Exchange in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn, New York is designed by Andre Kikoski Architect (AKA), an imaginative, award-winning architecture and design firm based in Manhattan.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

“We wanted to create an iconic building to speak to Bushwick’s up-and-coming status as a center of art and creative energy,” says Kikoski, “so we devised a unique aesthetic that’s dramatic, inventive, and inspired by the neighborhood’s industrial past. With state-of-the-art technologies and construction techniques, we were able to realize this 100-foot-long, eighteen-foot-tall façade in only two inches of depth.”

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

Scheduled to open in winter 2010, the 10,000 square-foot Wyckoff Exchange will accommodate a live music and performance venue – to be called Radio Bushwick, with interiors also by AKA – as well as an organic market and a boutique wine shop, all in a long-vacant warehouse in the heart of a vital and rapidly changing area of the city.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

The design solution for the building exterior is highly original, relying upon motorized door technology adapted from airplane hangars and factory buildings. The five pairs of moving façade panels create an ever-changing expression of function and tectonics. By day the panels fold up to create awnings for the stores and to shelter pedestrians; by night, they secure the shops behind them, while an abstract gradient of laser-cut perforations over semi-concealed LED lights makes the panels appear to glow from within – creating an enigmatic work of art on an urban scale.

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

“We chose materials for this façade that are both industrial and artistic,” explains Kikoski. “Our use of two restrained materials references the urban textures, surfaces, and character of the neighborhood. The surface quality of the raw, unfinished COR-TEN steel is elegantly transformed into a Rothko-like canvas by the setting sun, and the shimmering layer of perforated factory-grade stainless steel just two inches behind it forms a perfect complement.”

The Wyckoff Exchange by Andre Kikoski

Andre Kikoski Architect’s design approach in the this project, as in all of its work, is aimed at creating a dynamic, fluid piece of architecture. As an expression of AKA’s trademark resourcefulness and lyricism, and as an innovative approach to recycling buildings and creating a destination environment with an extreme economy of means, Wyckoff Exchange is truly a welcome development in this quickly evolving neighborhood.

Cayuga Capital Management commissioned the project and has some 40 other properties in the area. Kikoski sees this one as “a prototype of adaptive reuse”—low-impact architecture that can spread, easily and gracefully, throughout the neighborhood. “The project,” says Kikoski, “is a sign of things to come.”


See also:

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Castelo Novo by
Comoco Architects
Prefabricated Nature by
MYCC
La Halle du Robin by
AP 5 Architects

La Halle du Robin by AP 5 Architects

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

This multi-purpose sports hall by Parisian studio AP 5 Architects has shutters in the facade to open the lower part of the building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Called La Halle du Robin, the top part of the rectangular building is clad in larch batons, with the exception of one side, which is clad in wood and clear polycarbonate panels.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The lower portion is made up of Corten steel panels, 9 of which can be opened up and secured by steel cables.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The architects intend the appearance of the building to change over time, with the steel turning a deep red colour and the wood darkening with age.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Photographs are © T. Guyenet unless otherwise stated.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

More buildings for sports on Dezeen »
More architecture on Dezeen »

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The following information is from the architects:


LA HALLE DU ROBIN
Robin Sports Center Hall

Transform the box according to events or seasons. River running in the valley of the Plaine near the town center.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Next to the various buildings, the shape of the frame is based on the lean-to and utilitarian buildings in the vicinity. The roof inclination of the Sports Center is the same as the nearby petanque club’s forming a harmonious whole.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects
The roofing is of an average height of 4,5 meter. It is supported by a white lacquered steel frame covered with thin strips glued together. A large wooden cantilever portico is maintained by small metallic poles on the other three sides.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects
A waterproof layer made of steel tanks on the roof and of polycarbonate and larch sheets over the entire upper part of the building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The façade is covered with wooden lath to shield it from wind and sun. The lower part of the structure is in corten steel sheets over a steel frame closing the building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The equipment can be moved around from a room to the open space based on needs and seasons. When it is cold the building is shut when there are large events or in warm periods, 9 front panels are opened so as to allow free circulation and open view on the scenery.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

This open space configuration makes it easy to see the river and to open up indoor activities outside. The doors are opened and kept open by gas spring struts and secured with a stainless steel cable.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

A large sliding door is the final part of the existing building that allows a wide opening of the building on the outside during events.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The simple shape of the building changes with the moveable façades, the materials change appearance and the facing adapting to orientation all changing with the seasons.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

The wood and the metal sheets are all from local origin. The gradual evolution of those perishable materials will change the outside aspect of the whole building.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Above photograph is courtesy of the architects
The wood will turn gray and the metal sheets orange. The façades will bear the mark of time.

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Above photograph is courtesy of the architects

Materials
Frame: glued strips, galavanized steel + rustproof white paint
Siding: corten steel sheets, polycarbonate and larch panels

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

Intervenants
– AP 5, Architect and landscaping agency
Architect: Stéphane Lemoine,
Architect collaborator: Toshiharu Kudo

– Team AP 5 with bet 2C (structure, economist), Ouest coordination (construction site)

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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– Contractors Section 1: Grennevo, shell / Section 2: Haas Weissrock, structure / Section 3, roofing / Section 4: Mellé, locksmithery /

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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Site: Raon l’Etape (department 88)
Program: Space for multiple purposes: Sports training center hall

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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Size: 300m2 (3229 sq ft)
Client: Township association of the Vallée de la Plaine
Type of mission: full mission conception and build

La Halle du Robin by AP5 Architects

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Architect: AP5 architects
Cost: 0.3 million euros
Year: 2010


See also:

.

Sports centre by
Batlle i Roig Arquitectes
Football Training Centre Soweto by RUFprojectPrefabricated Nature by
MYCC

Castelo Novo by Comoco Architects

Here are some images of a visitors centre with walkways built through and around a castle in Fundão, Portugal, by Portuguese studio Comoco Architects. (more…)