Reconstruction of the Szatmáry Palace by MARP

Budapest architects MARP have replaced the missing corner of a ruined Renaissance palace with a Corten steel lookout point.

The L-shaped structure is part of a renovation of the ancient site in the city of Pécs, Hungary, which was almost completely destroyed. The architects stabilised the site and added new elements, including the lookout point, a low-level stage for open-air theatre and Corten steel seating blocks.

“We chose Corten steel as the primary material of our intervention to make the new structures significantly distinguishable from the older parts,” architect Márton Dévényi told Dezeen. ”The old remaining structures had been so incomplete for centuries that we did not want to rebuild them, we preferred to show their absence.”

The lookout point offers vistas over the Tettye valley, similar to those that the original two-storey palace would have enjoyed, while an aperture in the steel wall frames views of the internal courtyard.

Visitors ascend a staircase hidden within one wall and emerge on a walkway that runs along the length of the adjoining wall. A perforated pattern allows light to permeate the structure and filter into the staircase.

Photography is by Tamás Török.

Check out our Pinterest board for plenty more projects made from Corten steel.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


The reconstruction of the Szatmáry Palace

The existing ruins of the renaissance Szathmáry Palace is one of Hungary’s most valuable protected monuments. The palace is situated in the city of Pécs which is one of the oldest town of the southwestern region of Hungary with long historical background. The ruins are located in a park of Tettye Valley in the northeast part of the city, where the dense historical urban fabric meets nature. The valley rises almost from the heart of the city, offering a magnificent view of the city from the top. Bishop György Szathmáry (1457-1524) built his own Renaissance style summer residence here at the very beginning of the 16th century. The palace must have been a two-storey building with inner patio, made of local stone. It was said to have been a U-shaped building arranged around a courtyard open towards the South, that is to say, towards the city. A former archeological excavation confirmed that the Bishop of Pécs had a building with inner courtyard built that was rebuilt a number of times later. During the long occupation of Hungary by the Ottoman Empire from the mid-16th century, the palace housed probably a Turkish dervish cloister. This is when the south-east tower must have been built that is still untouched. After the Ottomans had been driven away, the building was left empty and its condition became worse and worse. At the beginning of the 20th century, one part of the building was demolished, and certain openings were strengthened with arches, thus providing a sense of romantic ruin aesthetics. Until recently the ruin was used as a background scene for a summer theatre. Despite the long history and its superb location, the palace in its bad condition was not able to fulfil the proper role following from its historical and architectural importance.

In 2010, it was Pécs, Essen and Istanbul that were awarded the title of European Capital of Culture. As part of this, a priority project focussed on the renewal of public areas including Tettye Park. This project provided an opportunity to put the ruin in a new context and the park could be present in its redefined way as a whole. The ruin in its dense complexity carries a number of qualities, therefore the designers of the intervention studied the current context and condition of the ruin as a starting point.

The Szathmáry Palace are, mostly, ruins of a building, but today this quality does not say too much in itself. It does not particularly reflect a significant renassaince feature. Obviously it lacks the architectural details we know very little about (few of the renaissance stone fragments kept in Pécs can be attributed to the building in Tettye). So it can be said that the architectural reality of the ruins continue to exist through the spatial relations generated by the remains of the wall. However, this shows a very mixed picture caused by natural and human erosion. The volume of damage at the southeast corner is so big that one can hardly picture the supplement of the ruins.

At the same time, the badly damaged ruin, particularly due to the neglected state of the park, appeared as a picturesque landscape element in the valley of Tettye. Pre-war postcards represent the atmosphere of a nice, picturesque tourist destination which undeniably rule the whole landscape. However, the abandoned park began to re-conquer the ruin so much that during high season, the character of the ruin can hardly be made out. From certain angles, it looked like a geological creature. This feeling has still remained if one looks at the ruin closely due to the intense erosion of the former southern side of the building. The image of the picturesque ruin is emphasised by the strengthening arches made through the early 20th century.

The third important peculiarity about the building is that the originally closed inner space of the palace has continued to be part of the park’s public areas today, dissolving the former differentiation between the landscape and the building. Thus the ruin has gained a public space quality in the meantime. Interestingly enough, the open-air performances of the summer theatre set in the ruins emphasised this feature even more.

The reconstruction programme of the Tettye Park basically made it unavoidable to re-define the role of the palace ruin as an emphatic landscape element and architectural monument. When defining the interventions, our main aim was to avoid overwriting the intellectual layers as well as the quality resulting from the ruin’s complexity. The starting point was to accept the existence of these even if the layers were developed either through centuries or just a few decades. At the same time, it was unavoidable to revise and ’retune’ the quality and the meanings carried by the ruin.

During the course of the architectural interventions, together with the monument protection authority, the ruin’s wholescale floorplan and its partial spatial reconstruction was carried out based on the scientific results of the archaeological excavations that preceded the design phase. During the excavation, the base walls of the southern wing believed to have been missing for a long time were discovered, which seemed to support the hypothesis that the building did not have a U-shape. As a result of the excavations, we were now able to draw the ascending wall parts and construct the original floorplan. What we basically did during the reconstruction of the floorplan was to repair the floor level inside the external outline of the whole of the original ruins, and we also attached retaining walls along the eroded southern side and the south-eastern corner, behind which we filled up the eroded ground up to the floor level. This supporting wall has a stabilising role in stopping the erosion that resulted in the sliding. The original floorplan is marked by the walltrace.

During the local spatial reconstruction, we designed an L-shaped, steel structure building part that had been missing from the south-eastern side, which includes a look-out tower and stairs leading to it, as well as a technical facility required for theatre use. It is important to mention that the new construction did not mean to be a formal reconstruction (the latter one was not an aim in fact and the amount of data that was available was insufficient), therefore it does not repeat the original mass properly. What happened instead was that we wanted to create such a mass in the place of the former wall corner that strengthens the building character of the ruin as opposed to its ruin character, framing the city view along with the current corner resembling it to the act of viewing out of a building. On the territory of the ruin, no more reconstructions were done, that is to say, we did not mean to ’complete’ the ruin. Evidently, the look-out tower offers a fascinating view of the city, but at the same time there is a nice view too to the inner part of the ruin, making the floor plan reconstruction neat and revealing.

As a part of the floor plan reconstruction, we re-defined the ground surfaces inside the outer walls of Palace, referring the former usage of spaces: the inner patio became a green lawn zone, while the other older inner areas, where the inner rooms were, received a surface course of mineral rubble of local stone granulations. As part of the interpretation of the ruin’s space as a public space, we applied surfaces that refer to the current public space use rather than to the original floor carpet. In the former inner space of the ruin’s Western wing, a new carpet-like stage was completed for theatrical purposes, rising above the surface level very slightly. The new corner construction, the stage and the street furniture (sitting facilities) all received the same Corten steel carpet.

As part of the reconstruction of Tettye Park, both the ruin’s immediate and distant environment have been renewed. Having replanted the green area around the ruin, the formerly covered, fragmented building that could be characterised as a more unified, magnificent whole has managed to regain some of its original character. We also managed to restore both the physical and intellectual layers that contribute to the ruin’s complexity through applied interventions. It was also an aim to rather define new directions to its future destiny when we placed the parts endowed with the remaining meanings in a new context. Furthermore, the whole area could become a new, exciting part of the city context, in which the re-defined palace ruin plays an outstanding role. Through the re-arrangement of the green surroundings, which included the removal of the traffic located south of the ruin, we created a triple terrace system that defines the centre of the Tettye valley in this place again.

Architects: Marp, Budapest
Márton Dévényi, Pál Gyürki-Kiss
Assistants: Ádám Holicska, Dávid Loszmann

Landscape planning: S73, Budapest
Dr. Péter István Balogh, Sándor Mohácsi, János Hómann

Structural engineering: Marosterv, Pécs
József Maros, Gergely Maros

Steel construction planner: J.Reilly, Budapest
Zoltán V. Nagy, Péter Bokor

Electrical Planning: LM-Terv, Pécs
Gábor Lénárt

Mechanical services: Pécsi Mélyépítő Iroda, Pécs
Erzsébet Bruckner, Ferenc Müller

Competition phase: 2007
Design phase: 2008-2010
Construction: 2009-2011
Gross area: 1040 m2
Client: City of Pécs

Photos: Tamás Török

 Above: site plan

Above : section

Above: floor plan 

Above : elevations

 Above: details

Above : axonometry

The post Reconstruction of the Szatmáry Palace
by MARP
appeared first on Dezeen.

Nanushka Beta Store

Nanushka Beta Store

Six architecture students have created a temporary fashion store in Budapest with a billowed canvas canopy and a sliced firewood floor.

Nanushka Beta Store

Daniel Balo, Zsofi Dobos, Dora Medveczky, Judit Emese Konopas and Noemi Varga hoisted 250 square metres of fabric into place around the walls and ceiling of the shop for clothing brand Nanushka.

Nanushka Beta Store

The firewood circles cover the whole floor of the store, while more sticks are fastened together to provide stands for accessories.

Nanushka Beta Store

Inflatable lights by Hungarian manufacturer Ballon are attached to the fabric ceiling and garments hang from rusted steel racks.

Nanushka Beta Store

Other popular fabric interiors we’ve featured include a hostel where guest sleep in fabric pods and a shop with hosiery stretched across the walls – see all the stories here.

Nanushka Beta Store

Photography is by Tamas Bujnovszky.

Here’s some more text from Daniel Balo:


Nanushka Beta Store

Located in the heart of Budapest and created for the 2011 autumn / winter season, the new Nanushka retail space aims to emphasis the brand’s core values and contrast the sometimes overwhelming racket of the urban experience.

Nanushka Beta Store

The young Hungarian fashion designer Sandra Sandor handpicked a team of enthusiastic graduates after posting an ad in several design schools. The selected architecture students, namely Daniel Balo, Zsofia Dobos, Dora Medveczky, Judit Emese Konopas and Noemi Varga, arrived to the team from separate universities and different classes. Working together for the first time, they had no more than three short weeks to finish the project.

Nanushka Beta Store

Quick and creative solutions had to be found to complete the task within the short deadline. However, they faced other constraints: they had to come up with a design that would leave the interior unharmed (only minor drilling was permitted) and also had to work with a relatively low budget. Also, the retail space in question had an unusually elongated shape. These were the circumstances under which they would attempt to create a natural, warm interior that would be in harmony with the values of the Nanushka brand.

Nanushka Beta Store

As inspiration for their design they used the wilderness and elements from classical wedding tents and barn weddings. Accordingly, they gathered together raw materials such as cotton, linen, firewood and rusted steel for the design.

First they created a rigging system for the 250 square meter canvas that would drape the interior by pulling cable wires below the ceiling. Running from front to back they were able to hoist the canvas into the air and let it fall and flow in a way that basically wrapped the entire retail space from the inside.

Nanushka Beta Store

They then sliced firewood into little circles and laid them out to create flooring. Small display stands were built from logs of wood that sprouted from the ground. Linen poufs and Ballon Lamps sharing the same cylinder shape strengthened the organic flow of the space, while the strict, geometric forms of the counter and fitting rooms, as well as the rusted steel racks created a firm counterpoint and a calm balance. Contrasts were also created with the choice of materials through the combination of rusty, rough, smooth and soft surfaces, all soothing variations of tranquil, clean, quiet white.

The use of these elements and materials was highly eco-friendly as their recycling was actually the basis of the entire design concept.

Nanushka Beta Store

Project information:
Project: Nanushka Beta Store
Location: Fashion Street, Budapest, Hungary
Client: Sandra Sandor – Nanushka
Design: Daniel Balo, Zsofi Dobos, Dora Medveczky, Judit Emese Konopas, Noemi Varga
Construction: Tamas Lindwurm – Honti Kft.
Lamps: Ballon Lamp Hungary
Photo: Tamas Bujnovszky
The project in numbers:
Gross area: 80 m2
Design and construction period: 3 weeks Lasting: November 2011 – February 2012 Canvas for the tent installation: 250 m2 Fire wood: 5 m3
Budget: 2000 €

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

A mosaic rainbow of glazed ceramic tiles lines an egg-shaped dome at the heart of a library in Pécs, Hungary.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

The six-storey library was designed by Hungarian architects Török és Balázs Építészeti, while the colourful tiles were arranged by ceramic artist Márta Nagy.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Library floors wrap around the curved hub, which is used as a place for quiet inspiration.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

A series of small windows and a circular skylight puncture the curving tiled surfaces.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

The dome emerges through a decked terrace on the roof of building, surrounded by a top floor children’s library.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Another building on Dezeen covered in colourful ceramic tiles is a Jewish community centre – see our earlier story here.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

See also: more buildings in Hungary on Dezeen.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Photography is by Tamás Bujnovszky.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Here’s a bit more information from the architects:


Regional Library and Knowledge Center, Pécs, Hungary

Pécs, a multicultural city with a rich history, was the European Capital of Culture in 2010. For the location of the new library a remote, run down, undeveloped plot was chosen. This meant the new building did not have the constraint or possibility to directly match other buildings. During the design process, I aimed to dynamically synthesize the dualities which appear in many ways.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

In the building a “beehive” represents the ideological centre and refers to permanence. This is a place of abstract thinking: a metaphor for the freedom of knowledge and also, in reverse, for the knowledge of freedom. I see beauty in the idea that my response for a knowledge centre is a building where the focus is not on concrete, permanently changing knowledge but on the possibility of thinking: in-other-words, an empty space which can be filled with the thoughts of the people in it.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

The ground floor reception room is horizontally open, and the upper floors are, in accordance with their activities, rather introverted. The extensive “beehive”, un-functional in any common sense, connects these differently characterized spaces. In terms of forms, the inner, abstract space is analogous, archaic and organic. The spaces surrounding the “beehive” are the result of rational planning; with their flexibility they express the possibility of change. The facades are defined by the airy, white ceramic-coated glass, which represents the latest technology.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

The inner surface of the “beehive” is an independent work of art: The Zsolnay ceramic tiles, with their world-famous eosin coating, refer to the use of local historical characteristics. The dual-use of material is intentional. It is important that an architectural work can be read in different ways: it should be local and international, stylish and traditional, historical and contemporary, but first of all have self-identity.

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Client: Municipality of Pécs, Hungary
Location: Universitas utca, 7622 Pécs, Hungary
total net floor area: 13.180 m2
construction cost (landscape included): net 3,8 billion HUF

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

lead Designer: Török és Balázs Építészeti Kft.
Balázs Mihály, Tarnóczky Tamás, Tatár Balázs
beehive cover: Nagy Márta ceramic artist
fellow architect: Török Dávid, Falvai Balázs, Báger András

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

interior design: Frank György, Fábián Péter
landscape architecture: Kovács Árpád, Lukács Katalin, Tihanyi Dominika
electrical planning: Nyári Ilona, Krén József, Osztrovszki Emese, Farkas Anikó
mechanical design: Mangel Zoárd, Kovács Zsolt, Kerék Attila
structural design: Volkai János, Ambrus Roland, Dr. Medek Ákos, Komáromi Gergely, Szarka Gergely
glass structures: Dr. Becker Gábor
contractor: GROPIUS Zrt., Csáktornyai Gyula President, CEO, Müller Csaba site manager

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti

Competition First Prize: 2007 March 30
Licensing plan: 2008 May 21
Tender plan: 2008 july 15
Opening: 2010 september

Regional Library and Knowledge Centre by Török és Balázs Építészeti


See also:

.

Junior Boys School
by McBride Charles Ryan
Ravensbourne College by
Foreign Office Architects
Community Centre
by Manuel Herz Architects

Community centre by MARP and Dévényi és Társa

Community centre by MARP and Dévényi és Társa

Square windows with various dimensions sporadically puncture the plain brick exterior of a community centre in Hungary.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Architects MARP and Dévényi és Társa designed the two-storey centre beside a school in the town of Sásd.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

The building has an asymmetrically pitched roof with eaves along one edge that match the height of those on an adjacent school.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

The centre provides a computer lab, music room, cafe and study room for pupils of the school, plus a library and gym hall for the use of the whole community.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

A handful of projects in Hungary have been featured on Dezeen in recent years, including a staircase resembling a wedge of Swiss cheese and a faceted stone concert hallsee all our stories about projects in Hungary here.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Photography is by Zsolt Frikker.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Here is a more detailed description from MARP:


Community centre by MARP

Sásd is a town of 3500 inhabitants located in the northern part of Baranya county. Its local government set to realizing the new “Integrated Community and Cultural Institution” with high ambitions and the use of EU funds on the premises adjacent to the existing elementary school providing for the educational needs of the Sásd microregion.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Directly adjoining the existing school buildings renovated in the framework of the present investment, the new structure is furnished with rooms for educational activities (e.g. study circle facilities, computer lab, music room, cafeteria and corresponding service units), functions serving the wider town community (e.g. library) and multi-use rooms (gym and events hall). All these features clearly demonstrate the intention to create a cultural centre for the town and the whole Sásd microregion in the form of a new Community House.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

When designing the new structure, we put priority on integrating it into its environment both intellectually and physically in a way that would make it stand out as an unmistakably contemporary and autonomous architectural proposition in its urban context. This process implied engaging in constant dialog with elements such as the somewhat fading, though characteristic tradition of brick homes in the surrounding built environment, the distinctive building line, nearby structures seen as significant, the presence of local monuments including a neighbouring church, the change of scale etc.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Through condensing these complex functions, each calling for large surfaces, in a single edifice – though separating them might in have been an easier path to take – we wished to take on the tradition that still managed to incorporate changes of scale by delicately integrating major public buildings within their historic town setting. The greatest challenge in the design process was to find contemporary answers with credibility and a sense of proportion to the innumerable questions raised in the quest for integration while not losing track of different (financial, construction etc) aspects of reality.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

In positioning the building, we kept the traditional saw-toothed building line, and even filled the gaps formed over the years when previously existing buildings were demolished. The entrance could thus be joined to a public plaza which creates a picturesque way for visitors to approach the building as well as serving as the venue of important community activities (e.g. fairs).

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Besides the building line, the compact mass of the structure is shaped by a number of factors: it interacts with the oldest wing of the existing school, a brick structure from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, being adjacent to it and following its eaves line. From this virtual point of reference, the planes and edges defining the shape rise dynamically until the other half of the block, creating an intimate embrasured entrance below the library space.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

The asymmetry of the high-roofed format was designed to enable proportionate roof structures to face the road, emphasising the monolithic appearance of the structure due to the identity in the tone and materials used in the brick coverage of the façade and the tile roofing. This minimalist design indirectly alludes to the rigorous world of the monumental backyard brick sheds parallel to the streets, built behind the homes of German-speaking townsfolk.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

As befitting its intended community use, the building vigorously communicates with the town through the large surfaces comprised by the irregularly placed apertures on its front, transmitting the life going on within its walls. The homogenous arrangement of these openings highlights the large contiguous spaces they enclose. Their position, set in a plane to the north and in deep casements to the south interacts organically with the environmental conditions.

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Architect:
MARP / Márton Dévényi, Pál Gyürki-Kiss;
Dévényi és Társa Ltd. / Sándor Dévényi

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Engineering:
Marosterv Ltd. / Maros József, Maros Gergely;
EG Mérnöki Ltd. / Erős Gábor
Steel structures: Dr. Metzing Mérnöki Ltd. / Dr. Metzing Ferenc
Mechanical engineer: Dévényi és Társa Ltd. / László Skrobák

Community centre by MARP and Devenyi es Tarsa

Client: Sásd Town Council, Sásd, Hungary
Location: Szent Imre utca 25-27., 7370, Sásd, Hungary
Size: 2.600 m2
Beginning of conceptual design: February 2009
Construction period: 2010 – 2011


See also:

.

Centre for Neonatal Care
by Feilden Clegg Bradley
House for elderly people by
Aires Mateus Arquitectos
Neighbourhood Centre by
Colboc Franzen & Associés

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

With its circular perforations, this staircase in a Budapest house by Croatian architect Biljana Jovanovic resembles a wedge of Swiss cheese.

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Aptly named Emmental Stairs, it is located at the centre of the house and hovers just above the floor in the ground floor living room.

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Treads are set at alternating angles to relieve the necessary steep incline of the staircase.

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Photography is by Gerardo Altemir.

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

More stories about staircases on Dezeen »

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

More projects in Hungary on Dezeen »

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Here is a description from the designer:


Emmental Stairs

The Emmental stairs was designed for a young creative family with an equisite design taste and an eye for details, and their two children. They were just starting the refurbishment of their apartment and wanted interior stairs that would harmonize with the historic ambiance of the apartment and their aesthetic requirements, but also add an extra touch to their living space.

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Since it is centrally located in the apartment, it inevitably had to be treated as the focal points of the space. Its suspended encasement divides living room from dining room and kitchen. It provides certain level of intimacy without isolating these spaces. The circular perforations on the sides let the sunlight seep through, creating surfaces that change the dynamics of the whole interior. The motif for circles was inspired by large windows that another focus point of the apartment. As they remind a lot of holes in cheese, the project was named Emmental Stairs.

Emmental Stairs by Biljana Jovanovic

Apart from being used for its original function, this “object” features a playful touch for children as well. It is used as an inspirational toy, that boosts their imagination and develops their creativity. Due to technical restraints the slope of the stairs had to be kept quite steep. This was somewhat eased through usage of angled treads that complements the visual effect of the stairs. About designer: Croatian architect and designer living and working in Budapest, HungaryLocation: Budapest, Hungary

Year of completion: 2011
Designer: Biljana Jovanović
Construction: Gergő Markó


See also:

.

Paris apartment
by MAAJ Architectes
Origami Stair
by Bell Phillips
House Antero de Quental
by Manuel Maia Gomes

Kodály Centre by Építész Stúdió

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

This faceted stone building by Hungarian architects Építész Stúdió contains a concert hall and conference centre in Pécs, Hungary.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The Kodály Centre houses the Pannon Philharmonic Orchestra.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

It was designed in accordance with the mathematical principles of the golden ratio and visitors can walk up a ramped part of the building to a stepped courtyard area.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

Photographs are by Tamás Bujnovszky.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

More theatres and concert halls on Dezeen »

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The following information is from the architects:


The Hungarian city of Pécs was selected as European Capital of Culture for 2010. The new Kodály Concert- and Conference Centre is one of the main projects for this event. There are two identities constituting the units of our world: inside and outside. Object and space. Extrovert and introvert. Active and passive.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

Community life and internal silence. The building that we can walk around, and the hall where music surrounds us. The building itself is vivid, moved by the dynamic symmetry of golden ratio. The hall itself is tranquillity filled by the symmetry of intellectual serenity. It all derives from the mathematical basis of our world.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

“Music that conveys universal truths itself, shows more direct connections with the physical and spiritual world order.
There are two sequences appearing significant in the sythesis of our world. As demonstrated below, both begin with the number 1 and 2.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

In the first sequence, each number is multiplied by 2 to get the next one, while in the second sequence, each remaining number is the sum of the previous two. Both sequences can be found in European music.
The first sequence is represented by the symmetry of classical music. It is filled by pursuit of balance. 
Not like in case of the second sequence.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The Fibonacci-sequence is the most common presentation of golden ratio by integers. Golden ratio is usually called dynamic symmetry. Its most beautiful realisation in music is perhaps the 1st movement of Music for Strings, Percussions and Celeste by Bartók. Golden ratio as a characteristic of the living world is perfectly efficient to express fight, struggle and tension of existence, just as balance to express the intellectual serenity.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

Bartók composed his most impressive pieces – Music, Sonata for Two Pianos – implying the sphere of golden ratio in the 1st movements, then principle of classic symmetry in the last movements. The two systems relate to each other just like two worlds – more precisely, as two faces or sides of the same world. The first one applies balance as a guiding principle, the second one applies tension. They are connected in mutual presupposition and exclusion, they compose unity and contrast.”
/after Ernő Lendvai and Erzsébet Tusa/

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The architectural characteristics of the concert hall are in close harmony with the common principles of design and musical composition. Dynamics and balance. Two sides of the same world.
The building elements: stone and wood. Hard and soft. Cold and warm. Age of myriads and centuries. Enduring and intimate. The ancient white stone snail slowly embraces the concert hall lined with pure wood. As if we were listening to music inside a gigantic wooden shape or instrument.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The opening of the concert hall means that a 200-years-dream is about to come true in the city’s musical development. Its essential artistic and professional aim, applying the principle of regionalism, is to introduce Pécs as the musical centre of the Southern Cultural Zone. As the residing orchestra, the Pannon Philharmonic Orchestra is going to determine the professional musical concept of the concert hall.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The existing traditional concerts gain new dimensions: having the opportunity to invite dominant guest artists who have not visited Pécs before because of infrastructural sanctiness, as well as to perform pieces that could not be staged in the previous venues. These are conditions for further advancement of the orchestra -and now all attainable by the concert hall.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

The new building include, in addition to a concert hall and a large rehearsal room, the offices of the Pannon Philharmonic and the Conference Centre, other rooms necessary for the operation of the orchestra (such as storerooms for sheet music and instruments), facilities serving the audience -café, bookstore, lounge, etc. – and several service premises.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

Click for larger image

The design competition was closed in the spring of 2007. The winning proposal was submitted by the Építész Stúdió Ltd. from Budapest. The archaeological explorations and licensing procedures were completed, construction work began in July 2009. The opening concert took place in December 2010.

Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

Click for larger image

project name: KODÁLY KÖZPONT / KODÁLY CENTRE – CONCERT HALL in PÉCS
location: PÉCS /Hungary/
client: the city of PÉCS
architects: ÉPÍTÉSZ STÚDIÓ
Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

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(abc) Tamás Fialovszky, Richard Hőnich, Ferenc Keller, Benedek Sólyom
interior design: László (f) Rádóczy, Zsolt Tolnai – PÉCSÉPTERV
acoustics: Éva AratóAnders Christian Gade, András Kotschy
Kodaly Centre by Epitesz Studio

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landscape: Sándor Mohácsi, Borbála Gyüre – S73
design period: 2007 – 2010
completion date: December of 2010.
gross area: 11.200 m2


See also:

.

La Llotja de Lleida by
Mecanoo
Art Museum by KSP Jürgen Engel ArchitektenTampa Covenant Church by Alfonso Architects

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

This underground railway station with criss-crossing concrete beams is by Hungarian firm Spora Architects and currently under construction in Budapest.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Fővám tér forms part of a new metro line, comprising 10 stations, that will connect south Buda with the city centre.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Three levels of reinforced concrete beams rise up through a void above the platforms.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

At ground level a new square will be created with large glazed areas to admit natural light down into the station.

All photographs are by Tamás Bujnovszky.

All photographs are by Tamás Bujnovszky.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Here’s some more from the architects:


“Fővám tér” – UNDERGROUND STATION BUDAPEST, HUNGARY

The new metro line planned in Budapest is to connect South-Buda with the city center. 10 stations will be constructed in the first step. Fővám tér station is on the left side of the Danube river.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

“Fővám tér” station is a twin station of the Szent Gellért tér, similarily with a complex stucture composed of a cut-and-cover box and tunnels.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

The complexity of the structure is even greater, since here a new tunnel for the tramline and a new pedestrian subway has to be constructed, as well. Having the new underground station, Fővám tér will become a new gateway of the historic downtown of Pest.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

The boxes are supported by three levels of reinforced concrete beams, the structure of which will be similar to a net.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

There are three layers of this network, which keep the walls of the box like a bone-structure.The design of the box is determined by this sight of concrete net-structure.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Due to the construction technology, huge rooms have been created in the inner spaces of the stations. The section of the space is proportional to cross section of average street in Pest , built in the eclectic period in the 19th century, so the station can be interpreted as a inverse street or square under the surface.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Playing on natural light has been an important aspect in the architectural formation of the entire line.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

The main goal is –apart from giving enough light of course- to attend on the interior design and show the architectural forming as much as possible. On the surface of Fővám tér a huge square will be created without traffic.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

This will allow of locating glassy, crystalloid skylights, which will let the sunlight reach the platform level, emphasizing the unique character of the beam network.

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Project credits:
Project: M4 metro line SZT.GELLÉRT TÉR, FŐVÁM TÉR UNDERGROUND STATIONS, BUDAPEST
Location: center of Budapest, Quay of River Danube, Hungary
Client: BKV Rt. DBR Metró Projekt Igazgatóság (Budapest Transport Ltd. DBR Metro Project Directory)
Year designed: 2005
Year built: 2007-2011
Status: under construction
Budget: cca. 20 million Euro/ stationvolume: 7100m2/

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

Stationdesign: sporaarchitects Ltd. – Tibor Dékány, Sándor Finta, Ádám Hatvani, Orsolya Vadászteam: Zsuzsa Balogh, Attilla Korompay, Bence Várhidi
General design: Palatium Stúdió Kft. -Zoltán Erő, Balázs Csapó
Construction, installations: consortium of Főmterv, Uvaterv, Mott-Macdonald
Aplied art: Tamás Komoróczky
Photo: Tamás Bujnovszky

Fővám tér by Spora Architects

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Fővám tér by Spora Architects

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See also:

.

National Stadium, Beijing
by Herzog & de Meuron
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by Axis Mundi
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