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Stirling
Prize 2007 Shortlist - Summary
Winner: Museum of Modern Literature, Marbach am Neckar, Germany
David Chipperfield Architects
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Museum of Modern Literature (3), Marbach am Neckar,
Germany by David Chipperfield Architects © Christian Richters
Stirling Prize
Winner
Building citations
America's Cup Building, Valencia, Spain: David Chipperfield Architects
Casa da Musica, Porto, Portugal: Office for Metropolitan Architecture
with Arup-AFA
Dresden Station Redevelopment, Dresden, Germany: Foster + Partners
Modern Literature Museum, Marbach am Neckar, Germany: David Chipperfield
Architects
The Savill Building, Windsor, England: Glenn Howells Architects
Young Vic Theatre, London SE1, England: Haworth Tompkins
America's Cup Building Veles e Vents
Valencia, Spain
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America's Cup Building (1), Valencia, Spain by David
Chipperfield Architects © Richard Walch
Architect: David Chipperfield Architects
Associate architect: b720 Arquitectos
Client: Consorcio Valencia 2007
Contractor: Ute Foredeck
Structural engineer: Boma
Services engineer: Grupotec
Landscape consultants: Wirtz International
Contract Value: 36 m euro
Date of completion: May 2006
Gross internal area: 10,000 sq m
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America's Cup Building (2), Valencia, Spain by David Chipperfield Architects
© DCA
Veles e Vents (sails and winds), the central base
for all Americas Cup teams and sponsors in Valencia, opened May
2006 within a remarkable eleven months of the architects receiving
the commission to design it. This 10,000 square metre shifting stack of
wide trays or decks has an immediate appeal, combining the formal tension
of its scale and asymmetry with the sheer modernist simplicity of white
concrete, expanses of timber decking and white painted steel trim. The
shaded floor slabs create 360 degree views from its improbable cantilevered
viewing deck of the industrial port, the new park and the offshore racing
courses.

photographer: Hisao Suzuki
The building and park were the social focal point for the world's premier
offshore racing competition in 2007, staged in Europe for the first time
in over 150 years. It is the centrepiece of the re-organised old industrial
port of Valencia. Its upper floors contain deluxe interiors for Americas
Cup management, for sponsor Louis Vuitton and for VIP corporate entertainment
a club, a restaurant, a boardroom, a wellness centre, a shop and
lounges; while there is public access to a busy viewing deck, canal-side
restaurant and trophy exhibition on the raised ground floor. It is a cleverly
planned building which manages to have no back or front and to feel open
and easy, while providing all the necessary enclosures for services and
circulation.
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America's Cup Building (3), Valencia, Spain by David
Chipperfield Architects © DCA
The building is a concrete structure with white painted steel trim; the
ceiling is constructed of white metal panels incorporating linear recessed
lighting, the external floors are solid timber decking, and the internal
floors are white resin. The predominant whiteness of the building is offset
by simple, brightly coloured furniture. Its simplicity induces you to
admire the overall sense of form and light rather than the details and
junctions. The challenge will be to find new uses for the building when
the Americas Cup circus has moved out of town, but it has an inherent
flexibility that would make it an excellent exhibition centre or even
a hotel. For the meantime we can enjoy it for what it is: a sporty and
nautical building; very light on its feet and thoroughly appropriate to
its function.
Casa da Musica
Porto, Portugal
Architect: Office for Metropolitan Architecture with Arup-AFA
Client: Porto 2001 SA / Casa de Musica
Contractor: Somague / Mesquita
Structural engineer: Arup London / AFA Lda
Services engineer: Arup London / AFA Lda / RGA
Fire Consultancy: Ohm / Gerisco
Acoustics: Dorsser Blesgraaf
Contract Value: 100 m euro
Date of completion: April 2005
Gross internal area: 22,000 dssq m

Casa da Musica (1), Porto, Portugal by Office for Metropolitan
Architecture © Phillipe Ruault
The Casa da Musica was the result of an invited architectural competition,
and the finished building is very close to the competition design. An
orthogonal shoe-box auditorium hides in a dramatically irregular concrete
shell. Narrow at its base, it feels like it has been hammered into the
ground, creating eruptions and ripples in the stone ground plane providing
a three dimensional landscape for skate-boarding, promenading and performance.
By sloping inwards at its base, the form initially repels efforts to get
inside, but a wide staircase emerges through a canted slot and draws us
upwards and into this magic box of tricks.
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Casa da Musica (2), Porto, Portugal by Office for Metropolitan
Architecture © Phillipe Ruault
It is a building full of scenographic moments and ironic gestures. A series
of spaces, sequences and staircases negotiate their way around the rectangular
auditorium which extends the full length of the building. It is only in
the two main stair / circulation spaces that the form of the building
is experienced on the inside. Here aluminium clad steps rise and turn
following the beautifully made concrete shell the space sometimes
soaring up to the roof, crossed by the forms of smaller rooms above.
Below ground is a different world; many levels of orthogonally planned
service and backstage spaces, mainly artificially lit, ensure efficient
running of the public areas above. The highlight of this underworld is
the rehearsal area; a series of high, flexible rooms with wonderful acoustic
curtains.
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Casa da Musica (3), Porto, Portugal by Office for Metropolitan Architecture.
Courtesy the practice
The auditorium is a fixed-rake rectangular box with very long straight
rows of seats. The form is generated by acoustic considerations, and the
ends are defined by double skin walls of sinuous corrugated glass. They
provide acoustic enclosure and dramatically distorted views to the outside.
The side walls are punctuated by more large windows of rippling glass
giving views into and from other key spaces in the building.
This is a well-made building which is intriguing, disquieting and dynamic.
It provides acoustically excellent spaces for the performance of all kinds
of music, and fulfils another contemporary role as a strange, enigmatic
and compelling object in the urban form of the city of Porto.
Dresden Station Redevelopment
Dresden, Germany
Architect: Foster + Partners
Client: Deutsche Bahn AG
Contractor: Station & Service AG
Structural engineer: Buro Happold, Schmitt Stumpf Frühauf & Partner
Mechanical and
electrical engineers: Schmidt Reuter & Partner, Zibell Willner &
Partner
QS: BAL GmbH, Schmitt Stumpf Frühauf & Partner
Project management: AYH Homola GmbH & Co. KG, Kaiser Baucontroll
Historic buildings advisor: adb
Lighting consultant: Speirs and Major Associates
Contract Value: £99m
Date of completion: November 2006
Gross internal area: 30,000 sq m
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Dresden Station Redevelopment (1), Dresden, Germany
by Foster + Partners © Nigel Young
Foster + Partners are masters of the one-liner. With some of the practices
buildings you are left wanting some greater complexity or richness, but
in the case of the restoration of the Dresden Hauptbahnhof, one of the
most impressive late nineteenth century railway stations, the key move
is of an apparent simplicity one which belies a complexity that is both
surprising and highly effective.
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Dresden Station Redevelopment (2), Dresden, Germany
by Foster + Partners © Nigel Young
Although not totally destroyed by allied bombing during the infamous Dresden
Raids, the station was badly damaged and suffered further from unsympathetic
repair and alterations. It is symbolically appropriate that the new work
should have been designed by a British practice. Foster + Partners won
the competition on the strength of their proposal to re-roof the damaged
late nineteenth century train shed with a lightweight fabric roof instead
of reproducing the heavy timber and glass roof that had existed previously.
This allowed a light touch to the repair of the steelwork, as well as
providing 13% more natural light. However, it is the aesthetic effect
that is chiefly remarkable, both for the fine quality of the diffused
light through the white fabric roof and for its formal qualities. Instead
of the parallel linear roofs and gutters of the original roof, the new
fabric roof is pulled tightly down into the springing points of the arches
in alternate bays, forming a fan vault somewhat reminiscent of that of
Kings College Chapel. From above the roof is even more extraordinary,
like a tent or a hilly landscape pierced with funnels down which the rainwater
disappears.
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Dresden Station Redevelopment (3), Dresden, Germany
by Foster + Partners © Nigel Young
The treatment of the flanking courts, which have been re-glazed and stripped
of plaster to reveal the texture of the brick walls are successful. The
decisions about the removal of some of the later alterations to the front
elevation have also been nicely judged, restoring the essential architectural
elements of the masonry to the windows and turrets while omitting the
highly ornamental adornments that can be seen on pre-war photographs of
the station. The people of Dresden are highly appreciative of the work
that has been carried out.
Museum of Modern Literature - Winner 2007
Marbach am Neckar, Germany
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Museum of Modern Literature (3), Marbach am Neckar,
Germany by David Chipperfield Architects © Christian Richters
Architect: David Chipperfield Architects
Client: Deutsches Literaturarchiv Marbach
Site supervision: Wenzel + Wenzel
Project management: Drees + Sommer
Structural engineer: Ingenieurgruppe Bauen
Services engineer: Jaeger, Mornhinweg + Partner
Ingenieurgesellschaft / Ingenieurbüro Burrer +
Deuring
Contract Value: 11.8m euro
Date of completion: June 2006
Gross internal area: 3,800 sq m
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Museum of Modern Literature (1), Marbach am Neckar,
Germany by David Chipperfield Architects © Jorg Von Bruchhausen
Following re-unification, texts of various well-known German authors which
had previously been dispersed to east and west have now been brought together
in this new museum. In a suitably commemorative manner the building forms
a small Acropolis attached to the National Schiller Museum on a ridge
overlooking the valley of the River Neckar. The entrance sequence is brilliant.
The visitor crosses an open terrace overlooking the valley, then negotiates
a series of shallow steps to enter the generous portal formed in the colonnade,
then enters through giant hardwood doors. A staircase descends to the
collections with their required diminishing lighting levels. It is at
this moment of descent that the building shows its pedigree a sense
of a progression to somewhere beyond, combined with a rich but selective
palette of materials and illuminated with subdued top lighting. The route
concludes in the permanent collection. Here glass cases containing original
manuscripts form a magical flickering landscape. There is a particular
theatricality about this space, as though the reflections, refractions
and multiple shadows from the small intense lights collectively represent
the soul of the German imagination.
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Museum of Modern Literature (2), Marbach am Neckar, Germany by David Chipperfield
Architects © Christian Richters
There are many things to praise about this building the architects
control and discrimination in the choice of materials has by now become
a signature but above all it is in the handling of the difficult
whole that the building excels. The external pre-cast concrete arcading
(or is it a screen or even a cage?) forming the entrance pavilion is also
applied to the plinth on the east side. This unexpectedly produces a monumental
elevation cut into the hillside, which simultaneously democratises the
acropolis giving equal status to pavilion and plinth. The same measure
and interval of the vertical structure is then to be found forming the
soffit to the beams to the galleries inside
. Truly a tour de force.

photo
© Christian Richters
Since the end of the war Germany has been sensitive to matters concerning
the neo-classical in architecture. Had it been submitted a decade or two
earlier it would surely have been eliminated for its formal manner. It
is encouraging that with time, more even-handed attitudes have prevailed.
The Savill Building
Windsor Great Park, England
Architect: Glenn Howells Architects
Client: The Crown Estate
Structural Engineer: Buro Happold / Engineers HRW
Joinery Company: The Green Oak Carpentry Company Ltd
M&E Engineer: Ateiler Ten
Quantity Surveyor: DBK Back
Contractor: William Verry Limited
Contract Value: £5 million
Date of occupation: June 2006
Gross internal area: 2,000 sq m
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The Savill Building (1), Windsor, by Glenn Howells Architects
© Gareth Gardner
This project is a good modern interpretation of that great British traditional
form: the pavilion in the park. The Savill Building, a visitor
centre that creates a gateway to the listed gardens, takes the form of
a dramatic gridshell structure made of timber from Windsor Park in which
it sits. This innovative use of traditional materials means that it harmonises
well with a skyline of mature trees, as well as being an object of great
beauty and grace in its own right.
It sits in a site of Special Scientific Interest (SSI), which is a grade
I listed garden in the green belt. Great care has been taken in placing
the building at a particular high spot in the landscape and in relation
to the famous Rhododendron Drive, so as to capitalise on the views out
and to marry the building most appropriately with the forms of the existing
landscape. The client wanted a landmark. What they have got is an appropriate
response, in a modern idiom, and they are delighted. The roof is a distinctive
undulating form which appears from a distance to float above the planting
on the sloping green roofs that run along the entrance side of the building.
As one draws nearer, red brick retaining walls become apparent and these
fold in to form the main entrance into the building.
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The Savill Building (2), Windsor, by Glenn Howells Architects © Warwick
Sweeney
Within the public area one perceives three main forms: the roof, which
ripples over everything, the timber gridshell twisting and turning like
bones beneath an animals skin; a curving brick wall to the south
which runs through the building and extends beyond it to slope neatly
into the adjoining folds in the landscape; and a glazed screen on the
north face, giving uninterrupted views out towards the gardens. It seems
wholly appropriate as the housing for a nursery and restaurant. Other
facilities, such as a lecture theatre, lavatories and back of house servicing
sit behind the brick wall, more or less concealed beneath a grassy bank.
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The Savill Building (3), Windsor, by Glenn Howells Architects
© Warwick Sweeney
Considerable efforts have been made to make this building as sustainable
as possible. Most notably all the timbers used in the building are locally
sourced from the Crown Estate and are from a renewable source.
Young Vic Theatre
66 The Cut, London SE1, England
Architect: Haworth Tompkins
Client: The Young Vic Theatre Company
Contractor: Verry Construction
Structural Engineer: Jane Wernick Associates
Services Engineer: Max Fordham LLP
Contract Value: £6.925 million
Date of completion: September 2006
Gross internal area: 3,155 sq m
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Young Vic Theatre (1), London SE1 by Haworth Tompkins © Philip Vile
The Cut is a cheerfully scruffy part of south London into which in the
1970s architect Bill Howell introduced the Young Vic at a cost of a mere
£60,000. Times and prices change, but Haworth Tomkins (who did such
a good job with the makeover of that other seminal mid 20th century theatre,
The Royal Court), have (again) remained true to the original while radically
expanding opportunities for actors to make theatre and audiences to enjoy
it. The ad-hoc aesthetic very much remains in the re-design and so does
the affection in which it is held by local people. This is their theatre.
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Young Vic Theatre (2), London SE1 by Haworth Tompkins © Philip Vile
Clearly the architects and their many clients (both front and back of
house) had a very successful working relationship: each listened carefully
to the other's concerns and this quiet interest has produced a building
strong in the particular haphazard character which gave the original 'temporary'
venue such a long and successful life.
The key result of this fruitful collaboration is that the audiences as
well as the staff continue to revere the singular intimacy of this famous
venue. The existing auditorium has been painstakingly reconstructed to
satisfy new technical requirements yet retain the audience/performer relationship
that distinguished its predecessor.
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Young Vic Theatre (3), London SE1 by Haworth Tompkins © Philip Vile
Externally this artful collage of carefully contrived pieces marks the
venue out as a critique of much that preoccupies architects today. Nevertheless
its carefully collected 'found' components have already become a point
of reference for many peers. The RIBA Awards judges debated whether at
times the deliberate tendency to prematurely age the form as well as the
detail had drifted into whimsy; rhetoric even. Ultimately however they
concluded that this projects merit, demonstrated by its very detailed
and careful response to the challenge of remaking somewhere that so far
as its audience was concerned had never been broken, was an achievement
that demanded recognition.
Stirling Prize 2007 Shortlist info from RIBA 2007
America's
Cup Building, Valencia, Spain
David Chipperfield Architects
Casa da Musica,
Porto, Portugal
Rem Koolhaas
Dresden Station
Redevelopment, Dresden, Germany
Foster and Partners
The Museum
of Modern Literature, Marbach am Neckar, Germany
David Chipperfield Architects
Savill Building,
Windsor, England
Glenn Howells Architects
Young Vic,
London, England
Haworth Tomkins
RIBA Stirling
Prize Dinner 2007
Venue: Roundhouse, London
Date: 6 Oct
Tickets £180 + VAT
Tables of 12 guests per table.
Tickets : Sarah Davey, RIBA Events Manager 0207 7307 3778 / events@inst.riba.org
Stirling Prize : contenders
Stirling Prize 2006
- incl. Shortlist buildings / architects / favourite
Pritzker Prize
- Architect Winners
Stirling Prize
: main page
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Comments on Stirling Prize Shortlist welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Stirling Prize 2007 -
page : adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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