Saturday 5 June 2010

Linking to an existing cultural and social network

A new Folkets Hus has the potential to link to the existing institutions of the town, including the archive, library, hotels and restaurants. Together, they act as a network suitable to meet the needs of a range of programmes from exhibitions to conferences.

Some of the new spaces proposed - such as the boathouses - could be rented out to generate income for the Folkets Hus and finance exhibitions and performances.

Friday 4 June 2010

An architectural intervention to mediate between winter and summer

Folkets Hus - a timber enclosure relating to granite horizons



The proposed Folkets Hus - light plays a key role within the building, as does the granite stage, allowed to come through from the ground below and serving as an anchor in the seasons.





A window seat within the wall allows views of the morning light playing on the rock outside, through the board on board timber cladding. This cladding is a reinterpretation of the local vernacular, adapted to include a seat and glazing. Below, an image taken at Badholmen.


At night, light from within the building plays on the rock outside.

The following collages describe the relationship between granite and timber further. A window in the walled garden lines up with the new lookout on Kråkholmen island, bringing the archipelago into the space.




Folkets Hus - a collision of past elements

The proposal for Folkets Hus takes its size from the old footprint of Badis, carved into the granite, the old Folkets Hus and the church. The church becomes a clear precedent in terms of size, being the one space in Fjällbacka which at key moments accommodates the whole town.

A network of interventions to enhance local identity





Through the introduction of new landscaped routes, boathouses, lookouts, cemetery, stage and Folkets Hus, the landscape is framed and protected from other development. All the proposed elements are reinterpretations of local symbols rather than unfamiliar, new ideas, and embrace Fjällbacka's physical and cultural heritage.

The network of proposals seeks to "provide a new channel for local history and culture", a need highlighted by the locals during the November trip.

The dual lookouts and cemeteries serve to visually link the mountain of Kvarnberget to the island of Kråkholmen, extending the perceived public space to the sea and archipelago.

Timber and granite - proposal concept

The relationship between granite and timber was identified as a key theme early in the project explorations, and has become a vital part of the proposal.



The heritage of the stonecutters is reinforced through different granite strata - drystone walls, granite paving, cuts in the rock and monolithic boulders highlight the local skills of the area and the permanent quality of the landscape.

Light timber inserts with a stage-like quality sit delicately within this granite landscape, and provide inhabited warm spaces for the winter.

Badis is identified as the epitome of summer and tourism, and is replaced by a Folkets Hus, a year-round symbol of local identity.


A vertical journey through granite



A new stair is proposed to link the waterfront to the mountain of Kvarnberget. This granite stair, enclosed by an existing drystone wall, has a narrow, vertical quality reminiscent of the 'King's Cleft', Kungsklyftan, directly in line with the stair.

In the summer, this stair would provide a cool, shady transition between the sunny, bustling waterfront and the granite mountain; in the winter, a shelter from the cold, bitter wind.





Further steps carved into the mountain take the visitor through the mountain and up to the lookout on the highest point.

A new island cemetery, access across the ice




The proposed cemetery on Kråkholmen fits within a network of existing cemeteries and responds to a growing need outlined in the Council's Local Plan.

During very cold winters, the island is accessible by foot over the thick ice, and by boat the rest of the year.

Inauguration of the cemetery on the island of Stensholmen.

Two granite rocks, two cemeteries, two lookouts



The island of Kråkholmen's strong relation to Kvarnberget has the potential to be exploited through the proposal of a new cemetery and lookout on the island. These directly respond to the existing cemetery and proposed lookout on Kvarnberget.

Strengthening these dualities helps to frame the bold landscape and extend the perceived extent of the public realm to include the sea.

The lookouts take their inspiration from Badholmen's diving tower.