Sumit Singhal Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.
Hauptschule Rattenberg in Rattenberg, Austria by Architekt Daniel Fügenschuh ZT GmbH
February 29th, 2012 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Architekt Daniel Fügenschuh ZT GmbH
“This extension to a secondary school that was too small meet the demands of afternoon care is anything but the kind of architecture that attempts to ingratiate itself with its surroundings. (…).
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Client: Rattenberger Immobilien GmbH
Mechanical engineer: TAP
Structural engineer: INGENA
Completion: 2011
Floor space: 250 m²
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
On its short side the slender new building, which extends to the street, is connected at almost right angles with the monastery building by small bridges, while on the right it docks onto the gym hall with a fragile glass construction. By elevation the ground floor of the building Fügenschuh created a new, partly sheltered small outdoor space or school yard which with its paving makes a highly urban impression. It suggests a variety of possible uses, and is ideal for semi-public events, for instance.
(…) the building is made of concrete. Its surface is divided into clear geometric segments – that are differently treated. Some parts are polished, others rough, others have been left smooth the way they emerged from the formwork. (…).
Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher
It is the extravagantly positioned openings that the particular charm of the new school in Rattenberg. In the narrow facade onto the street a single large square window, opulently surrounded in copper, is incised flush with the wall, as a kind of representative “display window”. In contrast the windows on the long facades are far smaller and, as they are fitted to the inner face of the reveals, appear like dark holes. Through their placing and size they relate to the surroundings in a sophisticated way, the same applies to the suggestion of a gable with which the flat roof docks on the monastery building; or the use of copper, a material widely used in the old town of Rattenberg.”
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Night View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Exterior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
Interior View (Images Courtesy Christian Flatscher)
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on Wednesday, February 29th, 2012 at 4:13 am.
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