Gigon & Guyer - Kalkriese archaeological museum, Osnabrück 2002. Located on the site of the violent Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 AD, the design features a central viewing tower and three auxiliary pavilions devoted to a different sensory interpretation of the grounds. A pavilion for sight, which is enclosed in a dark cube with small slivers open to the exterior, provides a silent space for contemplation. A pavilion for sound, featuring a large, peroscopic funnel which amplifies the forest sounds heard 1000′s of years earlier in battle. Lastly, a vision pavilion features a small, rotating lens, creating a camera obscura image of the battle field on the interior. Interspersed between the buildings is a series of hardscaped elements such as cor-ten fencing, sculptures, and embedded pavers marking the movements of the battle throughout the site designed by Zulauf Seippel Schweingruber. Photos © Heinrich Helfenstein, Klemens Ortmeyer.
sexta-feira, março 18, 2016
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