Saturday, 28 September 2013

Stockholm Public Library, Sweden.

Wall of Knowledge at the Stockholm Public Library, Sweden.

Designed for the International Competition of Architecture, students from the Architecture School of Paris La Siene imagined this incredible concept!

The Wall of Knowledge, the Stockholm Public Library concept won the Master Award for an award winning Architectural Image.

Discussed by a committee of which Asplund himself was a member from 1918, a design scheme was proposed in 1922, and construction began in 1924. Partly inspired by the Barrière Saint-Martin (Rotonde de la Villette) by Claude Nicolas Ledoux, Asplund abandoned earlier ideas for a dome in favour of a rotunda whose tall cylinder gives the exterior some monumentality. In the course of its planning, he reduced elements of the classical order to their most abstract geometrical forms, for the most part eliminating architectural decor. Stockholm Public Library was Sweden's first public library to apply the principle of open shelves where visitors could access books without the need to ask library staff for assistance, a concept Asplund studied in the United States during the construction of the library. All the furnishings in all the rooms were designed for their specific positions and purposes.

Officially opened on 31 March 1928 in the presence of Prince Eugen, due to financial constraints the library was still missing its west wing which was only added in 1932 to complete the approximately square base around the rotunda of the main reading room. Stockholm Public Library is one of Asplund's most important works and illustrates his gradual shift from classicism to functionalism.
Also designed by Asplund and completed in 1931 is the parkland to the south with its large pond and the shops along Sveavägen. The three simple annex buildings to the west, too, formed part of Asplund's original concept but were designed by other architects, i.e. Erik Lallerstedt (two blocks furthest west, 1929–30 and 1932) and Paul Hedqvist (1952–53).[1]
Charles Holden's design of Arnos Grove tube station in North London is said to be based on the Stockholm Public Library.

Proposed future expansion

In 2006, the announcement of an international architectural competition for a library extension attracted a massive 1,170 entries, although only very few of the leading international architects participated.[2] The new structure was to be built next to Asplund's main building, using the site occupied by the three annex buildings, whose fate (i.e. demolition or integration) was deliberately left open in the brief.
On 16 November 2007, little-known German architect Heike Hanada was declared the winner with her proposal Delphinium. Her project includes a high-rise glass building, spatially removed from Asplund's main library but connected to it by a low, podium-like structure with a semi-circular courtyard into which the slope of the Observatorielunden seems to flow.[3]
Although Hanada was instructed to produce preliminary plans for the project's realisation, the extension was been put on hold in late 2009. This was due to a change in city government with different priorities[4] as well as a local campaign turned international about what critics saw as an unacceptable impact on the original, Asplund approved complex.




No comments:

Post a Comment