*워터프론트, 캔틸레버 스페이스 [ Stefano Boeri ] Villa Méditerranée

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바다를 바라보다.

빌라 메디테란은 지역적 특성인 항만 인프라 속 새로운 연결고리를

도시와 건축 속에 생성한다. 바다의 수평선을 연장하는 듯한 드라마틱한 시퀀스는

36미터의 장대한 캔틸레버 스트럭쳐 시스템을 통하여 구현,

강화 콘크리트와 철골의 복합구조를 통해 구축되며

바다와 도시를 면한 두개의 얼굴? 글래스 파사드를 형성한다.

이러한 건축적 특징은 기존 워터프론트의 로컬 플랫폼 안에서

새로운 플랫폼의 제시로 현대건축의 도전을 담는 그릇으로 표현,

총 8,800 스퀘어미터 공간안에 대형전시장과 컨퍼런스와 극장을 겸하는

지하 이벤트 스페이스로 크게 구성된다.

또한 캔틸레버 하단부, 지면에 위치한 야외풀장은 물놀이, 수영을 위한 공간이라기 보다

도시와 바다를 연결하는 이벤트 스페이스로 낚시, 게임, 파티, 쇼 등을 위한

템퍼러리 이벤트 스페이스로 활용된다.


reviewed by SJ


Villa Méditerranée looks as if it has always been part of the city of Marseille, belonging to its port and the sea. Situated at the foot of the Tourette promontory, north of the entrance to the Vieux-Port, the most significant building built to date by Boeri Studio (Stefano Boeri, Gianandrea Barreca, Giovanni La Varra) has already become an established feature of the surrounding landscape, even though it will not be quite finished until spring 2013.

The complex volume, comprising some 8,800 square metres, presents two very distinct faces, one to the city and the other to the sea. The elevation facing the high walls of Fort Saint-Jean displays a sober, contemporary, almost subdued elegance; while the facade overlooking the Mediterranean is characterised by a radically modernist design, standing out with its imposing cantilever of 36 metres, reaching for the breakwater and horizon beyond as if it were some sort of seafaring machine. This Janus Bifrons nature is achieved despite the fact that in section the building is completely wrapped by a continuous and uniform skin. Composed of large, near-white concrete panels alternating with syncopated ribbon windows of different widths and lengths, this cladding presents the obsessive leitmotifs of the firm's current output.

The mass suspended in midair is an eternal modernist dream, and here its realisation sets up an intricate, dual link with the place. Visible on the surface are striking affinities with a wide range of port structures that contrast with the horizontality of the wharves — from harbour stations to shipping control towers, with their typically functional architectural language. In this respect, it is worth remembering that Stefano Boeri is well versed in port design, an experience accumulated over a period of nearly 20 years throughout the Mediterranean: from Naples to Genoa, and from Greece to the Maddalena in Sardinia. More in depth, in Marseille the dizziness of an architecture suspended in midair inevitably recalls one of modernism's unconscious archetypes: the gigantic pont transbordeur (transporter bridge) that linked the opposite sides of the Vieux-Port, photographed by, among others, László Moholy-Nagy and mentioned on several occasions by Le Corbusier and Sigfried Giedion. Villa Méditerranée's statement seems intended to encompass not only the still visible city, but also the interrupted memory of Marseille.




The scale of the cantilever also engendered another, perhaps involuntary but certainly significant consequence. In order to stabilise the considerable oscillations of the 4 gigantic grid brackets, set about 12 metres apart, the structural engineers (AR&C) were obliged to add weight, inertial mass, with a uniform distribution across the surface of the overhang. The architectural solution consisted in the adoption of particularly massive external cladding panels in prefabricated concrete, which on Boeri's indications were also to have large dimensions. The thin, stratified and fragile skin wraps the architecture's volume like a tape (in short, the Dutch vernacular skin of the 1990s), becoming almost a cyclopean, eternal wall, different only in its colour from the ramparts of Fort Saint-Jean behind it.

Suddenly, rather than bearing an affinity with the delicate brise-soleil embroidery of the adjacent MuCEM building by Rudy Ricciotti, Villa Méditerranée seems closer to the tectonic solidity of Fernand Pouillon's constructions on top of the Tourette promontory and along the west bank of the Old Port.

Once inside Villa Méditerranée, one encounters the built transposition of the potent, even over-explicit gesture presented in the competition project, which, however, commendably sought to outline an understandable, and in a way democratic rhetoric. The result is a truly complex and many-sided building that successfully strings together a rich and extremely diversified sequence of interiors.

With its dramatic proportions, the high and narrow atrium crosses the entire width of the building transversely, once again revealing that the architectural design takes its cue above all from its section. The two long walls delimiting the atrium are parallel neither in plan nor in elevation. Thus they create a certain degree of tension, accentuated by the escalator, set diagonally, and by walkways that span the space. The absence of colour is a common feature in all of the atrium's component parts. The afternoon light penetrates it diagonally, projecting the regular but intricate structural grid onto the neutral surface of a sloping wall. The depth of these shadows steadily grows as they move away from the entrance, due to the astute diagonal fold of the wall itself. It is like being inside a gigantic, but fortunately tidier kind of Merzbau.

The uninterrupted, low and wide space on the top floor tapers as it approaches the long horizontal window overlooking the open sea, offering splendid views of the busy port. On a slight gradient, the floor slab almost physically seems to convey the exponential variation of stresses in the structural members that run diagonally across the space to define three parallel surfaces. You don't have to look at the water below, through the glazed panels in the wooden floor, to realise you are suspended in midair.

The atrium leads into the large underwater volume, diametrically opposite to the one above it, through a complex sequence of stairways. The first is straight and almost hidden by the escalator, and leads progressively towards the discovery of a second, far more spectacular staircase. With a broad, unsupported metal spiral, it provides access to the lower, public level. This wide and almost square space is dominated by the presence of four cylindrical elements: the above-mentioned staircase, the volume containing the vertical communications, a flexible space defined by a sound-absorbent mobile curtain, and the auditorium — a true wooden gem. Once again, the distinct perception of being below the surface of the sea is heightened by the tremulous light filtered through openings in the ceiling. The mute cylindrical volumes seem to be shaped by the necessity to withstand the pressure of the water. With discreet elegance, the architecture alludes to the imagery of possible underwater worlds.

The volumes containing the emergency exits are masterpieces invisible to the public, re-emerging on the surface from the southwest side of the underwater level: open-sky raw concrete spaces covered at esplanade level by a metal grille and traversed by a common emergency staircase. Resurfacing to the light makes it apparent just how deep the architecture had gently led the visitor. This emersion occurs next to the facade of the MuCEM, on the other side of the canal that brings water into the dock pool surrounding the building, thus highlighting that the submerged volume is actually larger than that of the building above water level.

The polyhedral spatial complexity of Villa Méditerranée reflects the hybrid and as yet undefined programme that it will be hosting. Firmly backed from the start by Michel Vauzelle, president of the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, the building will be home to the Euro-Mediterranean Regional and Local Assembly (ARLEM) — an authority still in the embryo stage whose aim will be to foster trade and collaboration among the various Mediterranean countries. The architecture designed and built by Boeri is sufficiently flexible and programmatically open to accommodate and stimulate a range of activities that are not yet fully defined: from the representative headquarters of ARLEM to exhibition spaces; from a congress centre to a theatre of cultural events. Thankfully, the indeterminate future programme is in this case offset by clear-cut architectural choices. Indeed, the structure is free for use precisely by virtue of its architectural precision, the same precision and complexity that emerges in Villa Méditerranée's approach to the fundamental material around which it is built: the Mediterranean Sea.

The never obvious, albeit cleverly rhetorical relationship with the sea is also evident in the reversed natural city-building-water sequence. In fact, from the Tourette promontory, a stretch of water divides the building from dry land, as if it stood on an island. Conversely, it is perceived from the open sea like a construction suspended parallel to the land. Finally, to render the system of relationships even more elaborate, almost as if it had been designed by Camillo Sitte, the dock water only becomes visible from within the basin itself, effectively defined by a roof, a wall and steps on its three free sides. From above and below water level one is offered excellent views of future transformations — both probable and possible — of the Mediterranean. Andrea Zanderigo, architect

The sea in the architecture
1. Villa Méditerranée is a place of thought and research that physically embraces the sea. When I designed the building in 2003, I was working with the Multiplicity group on an investigation into routes travelled by illegal immigrants in the Mediterranean. Titled Solid Sea, our study set out to highlight the new form of the Mediterranean, how it had become a "solid sea" crossed by routes that are as specialised and rigid as motorways, ones which never allow their various users (immigrants, tourists, fishermen and the military, for example) to meet or communicate. A year before, at Documenta XI in Kassel, with Multiplicity we presented the reconstruction of a tragedy that took place off the coast of Sicily: a shipwreck that claimed the lives of 283 Sri Lankan, Indian and Pakistani refugees, partly as a result of the indifference of the Italian, Maltese and Libyan authorities.

The desire to counteract this drift towards closure and isolation led to the idea of a building that, in contrast, is explicitly open to the cultural exchanges originating from the sea, welcoming researchers, students, artists, intellectuals and tourists. This structure aims to represent the extraordinary mixture of languages, tastes and colours that Marseille has received from other cities in the Mediterranean.

It is a design capable of embodying the ambitious project of Michel Vauzelle, the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region: to create a centre in Marseille for the revival of cultural and political relationships between the Mediterranean's different shores and cities, amid a Europe in crisis, a North Africa in turmoil and a Middle East being torn apart.

2 The Villa is a dock building. I have always been obsessed with harbour architecture. For many years, in Genoa, Thessaloniki, Naples, Trieste, Mytilene and La Maddalena, I have studied, thought about and designed buildings that face onto the sea — constructions like silos, naval stations, warehouses, observation towers and dry docks. These buildings work as border infrastructure, accustomed to handling the huge mobile volumes of ships and containers, acting as boundaries between expanses of water and the large spaces used for parking and shunting goods.

Villa Méditerranée is a construction that combines the characteristics of civic architecture with those of harbour infrastructure and off-shore platforms. Its spaces, traversed by a mixed structure of reinforced concrete and steel, are articulated in plan via three parallel, superimposed, horizontal levels, two of which are developed above and below the level of the sea — a large, 1,000-square-metre exhibition area set 14 metres above the water, and a 2,500-squaremetre space for conferences and theatrical events below. The heart of the project is the large piazza/ dock pool: a covered collective space protected from the sun and wind. The water piazza is connected to the open sea, allowing currents, fish and boats to enter the architecture. Rather than creating a pool or basin, this marine building provides useful space for mooring and sailing, for games, parties, shows, commerce and even fishing. Villa Méditerranée will be the great cavana of Marseille, a place where the city can welcome the currents of thought and life that cross the Mediterranean. Stefano Boeri, architect and professor of urban planning


from  domusweb


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