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Sumit Singhal
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.

Atrium of Holy Angels Mausoleum in Victoria, Australia by Harmer Architecture

 
February 25th, 2020 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Harmer Architecture

The Atrium of Holy Angels Mausoleum is located in one of Melbourne’s major urban cemeteries, Fawkner Memorial Park in Sydney Road Fawkner, which is managed by the Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust. The Trust commissioned Harmer Architecture to design the mausoleum as a fourth stage to the nearby Holy Angels Mausoleum complex also designed by Harmer Architecture.

The mausoleum provides above ground burial for 672 people within in situ concrete crypts which are arranged on top of each other on 6 levels and in eight separate blocks located around a central landscaped courtyard.

Image Courtesy © Jonathan Hadiprawira

  • Architects: Harmer Architecture
  • Project: Atrium of Holy Angels Mausoleum
  • Location: Fawkner Memorial Park, Victoria, Australia
  • Photography: Trevor Mein, Jonathan Hadiprawira
  • Software used: Autocad, SketchUp, Lumion
  • Design Team: Philip Harmer, Andrew Briant, Jonathan Hadiprawira (Harmer Architecture)
  • Clients: Greater Metropolitan Cemeteries Trust
  • Engineering: GHD Group (Structural & Civil), JBA Consulting Engineers (Services Engineering)
  • Landscape: Urban Initiatives
  • Consultants: Inline Building Surveying (Building Surveyor)
  • Gross Built Area: 1,013 msq
  • Completion Year: 2017

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

The new Atrium of Holy Angels Mausoleum encapsulates a centuries old tradition of arranging places for burial into a circle or ring. The mausoleum is designed to be open and accessible from eight different points of the compass and these axes provide dramatic framed landscape views from within the new central courtyard and from around the outside perimeter of the building into the central space.

The mausoleum features an integrated colour palette using natural materials that give a comforting and welcoming atmosphere. Architectural elements that integrate the building include the perforated stainless steel “curtains” that shelter the inner and outer galleries and also a solid timber lined ceiling and polished render feature walls to the main entry area. Memorial crypts are individualized using bands of contrasting coloured polished granite. Further choice of burial place is enhanced by crypts that either face the internal courtyard or look out to the surrounding cemetery landscape.

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

The mausoleum design is strongly related to the Harmer Architecture designed Holy Angels Mausoleum nearby, and most particularly the rear section of the Chapel of St. Gabriel which also features a circular layout and internal courtyard.

The people who favour this type of burial, who are generally of Southern Italian descent, buy crypts “pre need” while they are still alive in preparation for their deaths. The crypts are mostly purchased by couples who want to be buried side by side.

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

The Italian community therefore have a distinct cultural relationship to death and dying by planning for it in advance, preferring large Catholic funerals, and monuments of high quality with Italian stone and well finished concrete. The visitation rates of relatives to a deceased person is high and particularly during special times of the year that feature in the liturgical calendar of the church.

The Atrium of Holy Angels Mausoleum is therefore an active public space for relatives and visitors and also for the many hundreds of people who attend for interment ceremonies which usually follow on from a church funeral. The mausoleum is a place that many people visit to reflect upon and remember the lives of those who were close to them. Many people feel that although a loved one has died, their physical presence in an above ground crypt is real and comforting.

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

Image Courtesy © Jonathan Hadiprawira

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

Image Courtesy © Trevor Mein

Image Courtesy © Jonathan Hadiprawira

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

Image Courtesy © Harmer Architecture

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Categories: Atrium, Autocad, complex, SketchUp




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