Showing posts with label Kvarnberget. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kvarnberget. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 June 2011

A retrospective summary of the project...

Immersions in Memory

Every summer in the Swedish coastal town of Fjällbacka, my mother bathes in the sea early in the morning; a daily ritual of calm immersion with only water, wooden bath-huts and rounded granite boulders as a backdrop, a family tradition with roots in the town’s history. But the seasons transform Fjällbacka from a thriving tourist resort with 25000 visitors in the summer to a deserted ghost town with just 1000 inhabitants in the winter - the perfect crime novel scenario for international best-selling resident Camilla Läckberg.

By delving into the memories of residents and returning summer guests alike, a mosaic of particular visions of the town of Fjällbacka is captured, allowing its layers, character and legacy to be valued and ultimately preserved and enhanced through the project.

On the verge of a significant redevelopment of an abandoned waterfront, the project sits within a context of strong political and economic tensions, with several developers looking to expand on waterfront housing and touristic summer facilities. However, an immersion in the local way of life in November 2009 revealed a strong community with great pride in their culture and history but with very little public space for their events. Social activities and underused spaces were mapped around the town, and events such as the town's weekly sauna were attended. In addition, a bathing event and evening charette were organised and advertised on the local website to discuss development, problems and aspirations. Nostalgia was identified as a dominant symptom of the diminishing population, and discussions were held with locals to find “a new channel for local culture” and discover why "it was better back then". Meetings were also held with developers and council architects, in order to gain an understanding for the different layers that make up the town.

The project looks at the other side of this potential waterfront development by focusing on forgotten public spaces and Fjällbacka’s local heritage, proposing a series of small landscape interventions to frame the local culture and bold landscape. The project proposes the recovery of local symbols and skills to fit within an existing but neglected network, including stonecutting, boathouses and lookouts. Central to the proposal is a new Folkets Hus – an all activity ‘People’s House’, previously lost in the 1960s and found to be missed deeply by Fjällbacka’s residents.

Ultimately, the proposal seeks to regenerate and repair the town’s cultural and social system, reaffirming the local community and mediating between the deeply set contrasts and dualities of Fjällbacka: winter/summer; tourist/local; past/present; timber/granite.

Friday, 4 June 2010

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.

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.

Monday, 1 March 2010

Understanding the rock




The rock has the potential to be landscaped and considered as a whole, but its character and zones need to be understood first. An open space and two clefts/lines can be identified, leading towards Badis. Could these lines inform public routes within the rock? Could the open spaces accommodate performance areas or benches to take in the view? Could the lines be continued into the water?