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Riva Split, Croatian Architecture, Photo, Design, Waterfront, Project,
Picture
Riva Split Waterfront : Architecture Information + Images
Public space by 3LHD Architects, Croatia, Europe
Riva Split, Croatia
2007
3LHD architects, Zagreb

Picture : Damir Fabijanic
Program: public space
Status: completed
Date: Jan 2005 - May 2007

photos : Domagoj Blazevic
The city of Split, Croatia and its waterfront, the Riva, the embodiment
of Splits history and character, are among the most interesting and
most remarkable sites in the Mediterranean.
The Split waterfront is an urbanized, open and accessible public space
it is, so to speak, the towns living room. It stands
in front of Diocletians Palace, the home of the Roman emperor
more than 1700 years ago. Over the centuries the palace was transformed
from a private residence into a town. In a related fashion its waterfront
also underwent numerous transformations of material, form, finish
and functional use. Considering its exceptionally valuable role in
the city of Split, the competition guidelines for the waterfront restoration
had very precise requirements for respecting cultural and historical
heritage, taking particular care of the contact zone between the project
area and Diocletian's Palace, a world heritage site protected by UNESCO.
In May 2005, an expert jury awarded the first prize to the design
work of 3LHD architects at the public competition. The project was
completed by the agreed upon deadline and the Riva was opened on May
7, the Day of the City of Split, by the procession of St Duje, patron
saint of Split.

photos : Domagoj Blazevic
The waterfront is a focal point of community activity where the city
meets the sea. 250 meters long and 55 meters wide, it is also the
main public square, the space for all kinds of social events, promenade
by day, parade by night, the site of sport events, religious processions,
festivals, celebrations and political rallies. The 3LHD project rearticulates
the space for all the events referred to above, harmonizing them on
a new integrated surface that adapts to all the usage scenarios while
retaining the Mediterranean character of the citys socio-cultural
symbol. The projects goal was not to simply add a new modern
layer atop the earlier structure, but to free the existing surface
of everything superfluous, establishing an infrastructure that meets
the needs of contemporary life.
The project development starting point was a modular network of concrete
floor elements 1.5 x 1.5m, the measure of a full stride of two steps
in Ancient Rome, so called paces. The color of the concrete varies
from white to pale gray and its arrangement and concept is conditioned
by the notion that the elements seen from afar should make a pixel
image of a rippling sea.

Images : Mario Jelavic
The modular floor covering is the framework for all the current and
future purposes and determines the arrangement and the positions of
all the other elements of the public space: benches, green areas,
outdoor cafés, sunscreens, and structural elements such as
manholes, water connections or distances between light sources.
The project amends the detail that over the course of time the functional
arrangement of certain spaces of the waterfront was identified, but
never architecturally designed. The northern part, along the palace
and buildings, always had a row of cafés, restaurants and pastry
shops, which were removed from the façade by the renovation
project in order to enable free pedestrian movement along the buildings.
The outdoor cafés have become an element of spacial design
both as a functional part and as a part of the visual identity. Sunscreens,
lights and other equipment, which used to have different shapes, sizes
and colors, have become a part of the image of the city from the sea
and a unique element adapted to the climate, with the motifs of masts,
sailboats, sails and ships. The screens made for the outdoor cafés
are useful not only as the protection from sun and wind; the flexible
project of this urban element enables its easy opening and closing,
of course depending on the weather, making it possible to set the
sunscreen/sail vertically, turning it into a projection screen by
night. On holidays or during concerts and city festivals, it is possible
to have all the elements of the outdoor cafés tables,
chairs and the screen completely removed to enable the free
passage of a large number of people across Riva. One outdoor café
consists of an element measuring 6x6 m, which is 16 (4x4) modules.
The central promenade is 10.5 m (7 modules) wide and is free of vertical
elements over its entire length. It enables the passage of delivery
and emergency vehicles. The promenade is defined in space with the
outdoor cafés on the north and with light sources, palm trees
and a series of three differently shaped parks on the south.

Images : Mario Jelavic
A very important design element of the new Riva, are the green elements
that introduce the unexpected into the project with their flowering,
growth and scents, forging an unbreakable bond with nature. The primarily
Mediterranean but also aromatic, medicinal and spice plants include
myrtle, oregano, basil, wormwood, thyme, immortelle and lavender.
As perhaps a symbolic element, there is also "brnistra",
a species of acanthus, with the Latin name of aspalathos which is
said to be the origin of the name of Split. Plants are chosen for
their color and height: they are almost always short, not interfering
with beautiful seascapes, and with adequate colors that make the gray
and green leaves look from afar like the rippled sea, like the colored
concrete elements. The plants' colors vary from a dull whitish-gray
to lively silver and green tones; when the plants flower, they get
variegated accents, from stony soil to shrubs. All the chosen plants
belong to the Mediterranean climate and can stand the conditions on
the Riva. They are mostly perennials, immune to salt, thriving in
the hot sun and demanding little water. The landscape project was
done together with Ines Hrdalo.
All urban elements were specially designed for the Riva and reinterpret
the celebrated Mediterranean quality of idleness. By night Riva becomes
an ardent lungomare with the light sources following the particularities
of its different areas. The main promenade includes the basic lighting
of the pedestrian zone. Tall lights, arranged in an orderly manner
along the promenade, shed a uniformly warm white light on the entire
central stretch. This is the first example in the world of the fifth
generation of LED technology being applied to city lighting. Similarly
tall lights on top of the poles supporting the sunscreens have lamps
that light the narrower northern promenade. Urban elements were designed
together with Numen For Use design team and light designers
from Novalux.

images : 3LHD Architects
The competition program asked for a solution for the entire area of
Riva, covering 24,707 m2; in the end, however, it was decided that
the first phase would renovate only the central, purely pedestrian
part, covering 14,000 m2. The renovated area of Riva is a strip, some
55 m wide and some 250 m long, with its longer side following an east-westerly
course along the coast.
Riva Split images / information from 3LHD Architects
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Riva Split Waterfront - Information
Geolocation: 43°
30 28 north, 16° 26 16 east
Type: public competition - invited
Project surface: 24707 m2 (competition entry)
Ground plan surface: 24707 m2 (competition entry)
Ground plan surface: 14000 m2 (already made)
Price: 11.3mil€
Client: The City of Split
Author: 3LHD
Project team: Saa Begovic, Marko Dabrovic, Tanja Grozdanic, Silvije
Novak, Irena Maer
Design of urban elements: Numen/For Use: Nikola Radeljkovic, Sven Jonke,
Christoph Katzler, Jelenko Herzog
Landscape design: Ines Hrdalo
Light technology design: Nova-lux - Zlatko Galic and Dijana Galic
Electrical installations: Mladen anic, VOLT-ing
Water installations: Ivo Makjanic, HIDRO-dizajn
3D visualization: Boris Goreta
Model: Zoran Kodrnja
Main contractor: Kostruktor Split
Supervision: IGH Split
Publications: The Good Life: New Public Spaces for Recreation
Exhibitions: Take One, Hamburg, 2005; The Good Life: New Public Spaces for
Recreation, New York, 2006; Wonderland, 2004-2006
Croatian Architect Office
Buildings by this
architect
Spaladium Centar Croatia
Croatian tower
Polyclinic ST Split

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos
for the Riva Split page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Riva Split - page : adrian welch / isabelle
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