벤틀레이션 파이프로 만든 파빌리온 이네요.
어떻게 보면 구불구불 꿈틀이 하얀색의 지렁이 같네요.
웨딩채플은 더스 건축가의 패턴 재활용 작업중 하나에요.
50명 정도를 수용 할 수 있는 규모로 짜여진 틈틈히 아른아른
빛이 들어 오네요.
‘marry for a day’ 같이 특별한 날에 신청을 받아서 결혼 할 수 있다고 하네요.
여러분은 어떠세요?
어떻게 보면 구불구불 꿈틀이 하얀색의 지렁이 같네요.
웨딩채플은 더스 건축가의 패턴 재활용 작업중 하나에요.
50명 정도를 수용 할 수 있는 규모로 짜여진 틈틈히 아른아른
빛이 들어 오네요.
‘marry for a day’ 같이 특별한 날에 신청을 받아서 결혼 할 수 있다고 하네요.
여러분은 어떠세요?
Architects: DUS Architects
Location: Villa Escamp, Leyweg 795, 2545 HA The Hague, The Netherlands
Project year: 2009
Photographs: Myung Feyen
Pending completion of the new municipal offices in The Hague, which are scheduled to open in 2011, a presentation pavilion (Villa Escamp) has been erected next to the building site in order to give people a taste of what is to come. Designed by Korteknie Stuhlmacher, the glasshouse structure is divided into a number of different rooms that reflect the diverse activities of the new municipal centre. There is a Museum Room, a Garden Room, a Planning Room, a Library Room and, very important for a municipal centre, a Wedding Room.
The Wedding Chapel was designed by DUS architects, a young Amsterdam practice that has made a name for itself with an artisanal and hands-on approach to architecture. Their often small, conceptual projects, in particular their ‘public architecture’, frequently carry a hint of social criticism. Their ‘Gecekondu Summerhouse Hotel’ (an archetypical house made up of stacked Turkish shopping bags), for example, addressed the contentious issue of squatting and the related question of whether ‘the formal is normal’. Architecture critic Tracy Metz proclaimed it the ‘Best Architecture Project of 2009’. Other examples of DUS’s unconventional use of everyday objects include a porch of recycled front doors, an open-air pavilion made from red umbrellas, and a ‘cocoon’ of woven bicycle inner tubes.
In the Villa Escamp Wedding Chapel, DUS shows how something as prosaic as ventilation pipes can be transformed into a structure that is not only serviceable but which has an almost numinous quality. The trick lies in the fabrication: the chapel is in fact a scaled-up crocheted hat. DUS spent three long days crocheting two kilometres of flexible white ventilation pipes (delivered in 15 metre lengths) together by hand using a pattern worked out in collaboration with ‘crochet expert’ Sandy de Lange. The result is a six-metre-long, three-metre-high ‘dome’ that can accommodate 50 people (at a pinch). The pipes and the chinks in the crochet pattern filter the light. Couples are already permitted to ‘marry for a day’ there; the application to use the folly as a fully fledged wedding chapel is still being considered. It almost makes one hope that the municipal centre would suffer a slight delay.
from archdaily
Location: Villa Escamp, Leyweg 795, 2545 HA The Hague, The Netherlands
Project year: 2009
Photographs: Myung Feyen
Pending completion of the new municipal offices in The Hague, which are scheduled to open in 2011, a presentation pavilion (Villa Escamp) has been erected next to the building site in order to give people a taste of what is to come. Designed by Korteknie Stuhlmacher, the glasshouse structure is divided into a number of different rooms that reflect the diverse activities of the new municipal centre. There is a Museum Room, a Garden Room, a Planning Room, a Library Room and, very important for a municipal centre, a Wedding Room.
The Wedding Chapel was designed by DUS architects, a young Amsterdam practice that has made a name for itself with an artisanal and hands-on approach to architecture. Their often small, conceptual projects, in particular their ‘public architecture’, frequently carry a hint of social criticism. Their ‘Gecekondu Summerhouse Hotel’ (an archetypical house made up of stacked Turkish shopping bags), for example, addressed the contentious issue of squatting and the related question of whether ‘the formal is normal’. Architecture critic Tracy Metz proclaimed it the ‘Best Architecture Project of 2009’. Other examples of DUS’s unconventional use of everyday objects include a porch of recycled front doors, an open-air pavilion made from red umbrellas, and a ‘cocoon’ of woven bicycle inner tubes.
In the Villa Escamp Wedding Chapel, DUS shows how something as prosaic as ventilation pipes can be transformed into a structure that is not only serviceable but which has an almost numinous quality. The trick lies in the fabrication: the chapel is in fact a scaled-up crocheted hat. DUS spent three long days crocheting two kilometres of flexible white ventilation pipes (delivered in 15 metre lengths) together by hand using a pattern worked out in collaboration with ‘crochet expert’ Sandy de Lange. The result is a six-metre-long, three-metre-high ‘dome’ that can accommodate 50 people (at a pinch). The pipes and the chinks in the crochet pattern filter the light. Couples are already permitted to ‘marry for a day’ there; the application to use the folly as a fully fledged wedding chapel is still being considered. It almost makes one hope that the municipal centre would suffer a slight delay.
from archdaily
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