ArchShowcase 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. Architecture meets nature north of the Arctic Circle in Norway by KebonyJanuary 28th, 2016 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Kebony The Norwegian composer and musician, Håvard Lund has embarked upon an innovative project to create an artist’s retreat on Northern Norway’s beautiful and dramatic coastline. The retreat is named Fordypningsrommet, the Norwegian word for ‘room for deeper studies’, as Lund aims at inspiring artists to return to nature and deepen their creative pursuits.
The project consists of six small mono-functional houses with a uniquely playful design and clad in Kebony. The houses include a sauna, sleeping house, kitchen house, studio, the so called “tower for big thoughts”, and a bath-house. These dwellings are built on top of angled steel feet and anchored with bolts and concrete to create visually striking angles. Situated in the Arctic Circle, in Fleinvær Archipelago, the buildings have been carefully designed to give stunning views of the distinctive mountains and peaks of the adjacent islands of Lofoten. In summer 2016 the Fordypningsrommet will open to the public. The serene environment serves as a blank canvas for the creative minds of those who will stay there, providing a quiet retreat from the hustle and bustle of busy urban life. The remote location of Fleinvær means that there are no cars or shops, by stripping away many of the distractions of modern life it is hoped that artists can focus their minds and fully immerse themselves in their projects. The surrounding nature offers unusual high skies and long sights and horizons, which will help artists to work in a focused and effective way. Besides studies the place will offer concerts, talks, and previews of acts for audiences. TYIN tegnestue, the award-winning architects, together with their mentor Prof. Sami Rintala, designed this project and chose Kebony wood for much of the construction. This was a choice born out of the material’s versatility and practical applications as well as its beauty. The wood’s appearance and the dappled silver-grey patina that the wood attains over time ensure the structures blend into their stunning surroundings. The ease with which Kebony can be worked with was a key consideration, as the buildings are finished with an intricate lattice of wood tiles, evocative of fish scales, further interweaving the natural and the man-made. Developed in Norway, the Kebony technology is an environmentally friendly process which enhances the properties of sustainable softwood with a bio-based liquid derived from agricultural crop waste. By ‘pickling’ the wood with this liquid under pressure, the wood is permanently modified, resulting in greatly improved durability, giving Kebony the characteristics of premium hardwood. The robust nature of Kebony is incredibly important, especially in the Fordypningsrommet project, as the buildings are set out on the coastline, exposed to harsh weather and extreme cold climate. Contact Kebony
Tags: Norway |