|
|
Museum Veenhuizen, Holland Building, Dutch Project, Photo, News, Design, Image
Museum Veenhuizen Holland : Architecture Information
Development by Atelier Kempe Thill in The Netherlands, Europe
Staging History
Museum and Exposition centre Veenhuizen,
The Netherlands
Atelier Kempe Thill
An ideal city as a penal colony
Veenhuizen was founded at the beginning of the 19th century as an
open reformatory for the "disorderly underclass", with the
aim to educate and re-socialise people. Soon after the opening of
the institute the idealistic, progressive concept of a reformable
society was left. The village was hermetically closed off from the
outside world and was transformed into a prison village; voluntary
confinement became imprisonment. Over the years, in the whole region
around Veenhuizen, more prisons and adjoining functions were built
turning a large area into a prison colony.

Veenhuizen can be typified as a classicistic master plan in which
city planning and architecture form a Gesamtkunstwerk. Where in a
"normal" village the market place defines the centre, in
Veenhuizen one finds an enormous prison court.
Around the central prison court, along the axial street system, many
related building complexes are placed. To develop a total concept
till the smallest detail, all the buildings were given inscriptions
like "work and pray", "discipline and order" or
"work is life".
After a reformation in the prison system many of the classic buildings
remained without a function. To preserve the unique character of the
former prison colony, a decision was made to drastically re-programme
the existing buildings. One of the transformed building complexes
is the so called 'crafts centre'. In former times this complex was
a cluster of buildings meant for specific crafts where prisoners were
put to labour. Also the 'crafts cluster' received a new cultural programme
and was remodelled as a museum.

Arranged cleansing: classicistic origin
The 'Crafts cluster' is an integral part of the Gesamtkunstwerk Veenhuizen,
which has a national monument status. Over time the complex deteriorated
beyond recognition through the addition of multiple roofs, barns and
brickwork extensions. The nucleus of the design was the strategic
demolition of all non-fitting building parts. This strategy is related
to archaeology, the objective of this was to clear the building to
their original form and to restore the urban core idea of a classicistic
ideal city.
To achieve this goal almost 40% of the existing building mass had
to be demolished. A practical assistance to this operation was the
fact that large parts of the sheds, barns and roofs were covered with
asbestos. Also almost 15 years of vacancy had left its mark in the
form of substantial, hidden damages to the structures. But even after
these conclusions the demolishment of even the most primitive shed
led to far stretching discussions with the 'Monument Commission'.
The architectonic value of every building part had to be weighted
against the social-historical value.
In the restoration the goal was not only the achieve an 'original'
state of the buildings. By removing all parts such as chimneys and
other details, in combination with the stringent layout of the site,
the historical, extremely rigid and strict character of Veenhuizen
was arranged for visitors.
New historic layer: the new façade elements
After tidying the complete craftscluster as an ensemble, also the
separate buildings were remodelled. The buildings were originally
designed for pure pragmatic causes, this is why they missed every
sort of spatial gesture that is fitting for a public building.
To compensate for this lack of 'grandeur', the large openings in the
exterior walls, which remained after demolition, were taken as a starting
point to add new façade elements. These new elements strengthen
the coherence between the buildings within the urban plan. Lavish,
four meter high structurally glazed windows were combined with four
meter high doors which are cladded in black mirror glass. Seen from
the outside the façade elements not only close the openings
in a pure functional way, but also emphasise the monumentality of
the existing buildings. Through the unity of the new façade
elements, the use of the ensemble as a museum and its public function
is underlined. The binding aspect of the façade elements is
consolidated by their reflective quality, thus reflecting the different
buildings in each other in a multitude of unexpected ways. In this
way the buildings gain a strong connection with each other and with
their surroundings.
Furthermore the façade elements are part of the strategy to
achieve a maximum 'arrangement of history'. To realise this, the elements
are not just fit into the existing openings, but overlap the existing
brickwork as a new historic layer. In this way the existing buildings
as well as the new elements keep their autonomy and authenticity,
while achieving a strong relationship in which both are stronger.
The original brickwork buildings are exposed behind the façade
elements similar to a display window.

Classicistic interior: a factory building becomes a museum
Also in the interior design the strategy of 'arrangement of history'
was used to expose hidden, spatial potential. The most interesting
building with the largest potential to become the main public building
was the former 'blacksmith's working-place'. Large proportions, a
four meter high ground floor in combination with an impressive roof
construction formed a good starting point for a museum. Unfortunately
the building had a poor floor-plan division with load bearing walls
in the middle of the space and a floor blocking the view to the extraordinary
round, wooden roof construction. To give the building the spatial
quality belonging to a museum the floor was opened over the full width
of the building over a length of 10 meters. By doing this the roof
construction is visible from the ground floor, giving the building
a special, spatial experience. Furthermore a monolithic, steel staircase
connects the ground floor with the upper floor.
To whole interior was treated monolithic and was detailed in a sober
way, also by painting the whole in bright white. The floor is finished
in a shiny white concrete paint. The appearance of the interior is,
despite the structural changes, deliberately treated in a way so homogeneity
and synthesis exists between the new and the historic. A new museum
space appears which is designed as an arranged historical projection
of a historical, classicistic interior. Because of this the interior
fits well in the total ensemble.
The entire project is designed according to the strategy of the 'arranged
history'. The historical building complex is not simply shown, but
in itself tells a story about history with the elements of architecture.
All used means: the cleansing, the new layer and the classicistic
interior stem from the conviction that not historical breaks but continuity
is important. As if the architect of the original crafts cluster hundred
years after completion received the commission to remodel his own
project.
Museum Veenhuizen images / information from Atelier Kempe Thill
Dutch Buildings
Museum and Exposition centre Veenhuizen - Building Information
Site: Veenhuizen / Region of Drenthe / Nederland (170km north of Amsterdam)
Address: Oude Gracht 4, 9341 AB Veenhuizen
Architects: Atelier Kempe Thill architects and planners, Netherlands
Client: VROM Rijksgebouwendienst (Building service Dutch Government)
Branch / Vestiging Groningen
Postbus 108, 9700 AC Groningen
Bezoekadres:
Cascadeplein 10, 9726 AD Groningen
Process:
Commission: Aug 2005
Planning process: Aug 2005- Jun 2006
Building process: Nov 2006 - Jan 2008
Building:
Site area: 5.200m2
Building size: 1.500m2 brutto, 1350m2 netto
Building volume: 6.500m3
Total building budget: € 1,90 mio. (excl. VAT) - incl. technical
installations + landscape design
Building budget in groups:
Building: € 1,45 mio. (excl. VAT)
Installations: € 0,45 mio. (excl. VAT)
Budget per m2 excl. installation: € 966 /m2 (excl. VAT)
Budget per m2 incl. installation: € 1.266 /m2 (excl. VAT)
Team:
Team planning and realisation:
Architect: Atelier Kempe Thill architect and planners, Rotterdam (NL)
Team Atelier Kempe Thill: André Kempe, Oliver Thill, David
van Eck
with
Teun van der Meulen, Cornelia Sailer, Sebastian Heinemeyer, Kingman
Brewster, Jeroen Heintzbergen, Takashi Nakamura
Consultants:
Building Physics: DGMR Bouw bv, Arnhem
Structural Engineer: ABT, Velp
Service Engineer Electrical & Climate Installations: De Blaay
- Van den Bogaard, Rotterdam
Quantity Surveyor: Archisupport, Amerongen
Tender documents: Draijer Bouwkundig Advies, Haarlem
Architecture historians: BBA, Utrecht
Supervision building site: Centraal Bureau Bouwtoezicht (CBB), Arnhem
General Contractor: Jurriëns Noord bv, Groningen
Photographer/ Copyright holder: Architektur-Fotografie Ulrich Schwarz
Ulrich Schwarz, Kreuzbergstrasse 27-28, D-10965 Berlin Tel. +49-(0)30-4278708
|
Museum Buildings
Dutch Architecture - Selection
Almere Masterplan
Rem Koolhaas

image courtesy of the Office for Metropolitan Architecture
Almere Masterplan
"WoZoCo" Housing for Elderly
MVRDV

photo © adrian welch
WoZoCo Amsterdam
Dutch Architect Studios

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos
for the Museum and Exposition centre Veenhuizen Holland Architecture page
welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Museum Veenhuizen Building : page - adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
|
|
|