Monday, October 16, 2017

Snohetta Completes Art School Building at Bergen Transforming Interior Walls into A Canvas

Arch2O.com
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Snohetta has completed a new building for the Faculty of Fine Art, Music, and Design of Bergen University, Norway. The students are free to use the unfinished interior walls of the building as a canvas for their artwork.

After winning a competition to design the building in 2005, the Norwegian architectural firm has completed its construction this year. Each student was given a cubicle/studio to use it according to their preference. The students were creative to the extent that one of them put a piano in a vacant shower stall.

Courtesy of Snohetta, Photography by Tomasz Majewski Photography.

“Before architecture is used it is just a monument,” Kjetil Trædal Thorsen, co-founder of the architectural firm commented. “It needs people to become a tool.”

The metal façade of the building reflects the light during the day and changes appearance according to the weather. Glass boxes jut from the façade as a display area for the artwork made by the students. A hall was assigned for projects and was placed on the first floor at the core of the building.

Courtesy of Snohetta, Photography by Tomasz Majewski Photography.

The project was designed in compliance with PassivHaus standards which means that the hall would control its own climate which ranges between 15-25 degrees.

“There are no surfaces, only materiality,” Thorsen explained. “And the materiality has to work!”

Courtesy of Snohetta, Photography by Tomasz Majewski Photography.

The building includes 3D printers and other equipment of the latest technologies. Foldable electrical cords hang from the ceiling so that the students can use their equipment everywhere in the building. The KMD’s location now is what was once a Munck factory for cranes. One crane was even conserved inside the building, hovering above the hall of projects to lift heavy stuff when needed.

The main stairway serves as a gallery which will be used by the college to hang sketches of the students who have already graduated.

Anne Helen Mydland, vice-dean of KMD commented that it is a “challenge” to keep the interaction going between the students and the graduates.

Courtesy of Snohetta, Photography by Tomasz Majewski Photography.

In 1996, KMD was established after uniting two art schools of the city of Bergen. The university encourages students not to abide by sharply-defined art subjects, but rather explore hybrid programs of studies and activities. Such a principle is evident in the logo which disintegrates different words into one symbol.

Although the building has been finished, the interior elements can undergo remodeling in the years to come, when the college sees fit.

“We’re preparing for the unknown,” added Thorsen.

The project was completely funded by the government and nearly cost £105 million. Each student, even the ones coming from abroad, only pay £80 as fees of registration/term.

 

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