Sky borne buildings (penthouses) in Scheveningen (The Hague)
Date: completion September 2005
Team: Eric Vreedenburgh, Niels Groeneveld, Coen Bouwmeester, Jaap
Baselmans, Guido Zeck
The
harbour of Scheveningen was originally a fishing harbour. In the
course of time fishery declined in importance and so did the companies.
As a result, many old warehouses in the Second Harbour became
redundant and are now due for demolition. At the same time, there
is a large demand for building ground in this area. By renovating
the warehouses and placing steel penthouses on their rooftops,
the harbour is given a new lease of life.
These projects in Scheveningen led to the discussion about rooftop
housing (sky borne buildings) in the Netherlands. The themes developed
here in connection with type, technology and impact on urban design
were later elaborated in projects such as the Black Madonna in
the centre of The Hague and the Witte de Withstraat in Rotterdam.
Archipelontwerpers has become a model for some of these projects,
such as IFD (Industrial, Flexible and Dismountable) Belvedere,
IPSV, and the experimental status of the Rotterdam local authority.
The
Harbour View penthouse designed 12 years ago by Archipelontwerpers,
was the first step towards rooftop housing. The point of reference
for this design was the presence of several robust warehouses
with steel cooling plants on the roof. A two-storey, lightweight
steel penthouse has been constructed on top of a brick base consisting
of two structures that face one another (the socle). The construction
comprises a frame of hot-rolled sections with a lightweight panel
filling.
The penthouse was to be used as a home/office and/or studio. These
demands were frequently modified and expanded during the building
process. The penthouse consists of a single space occupying both
storeys. Rooms like the bathroom and bedroom can be partitioned
off by means of sliding partitions. The demands were as follows:
the residents must be able to look out from the bath over the
empty space and see the sea, and once they were out of the bath
they must be able to follow different routes through the house.
Essential for this penthouse are the spacious terraces on different
levels and the double route afforded by the two staircases.
After the penthouse had been completed, Archipelontwerpers worked
on the transformation of a number of warehouses that had been
declared unusable and were due for demolition. Similar steel penthouses
are placed on and above these warehouses (IJsvis, Nautilus and
Rokerij). The Scheveningen harbour can thus become an example
of stepping-stone urban planning.
The
principle on which the stepping-stone strategy is based involves
two aspects: 1) the formulation/identification of the theme, and
2) the transformation of the theme. It is thus not the case that
themes are closed systems, like a Lego box, in which the explicit
rules of play have to be taken into account in the search for
variants. The reverse is in fact the case. Because various similarities
are introduced into diverse projects, and are also identified
as such at a certain moment, a particular theme emerges as a pattern.
This theme then serves as the starting-point for new variants.
All variants also include many non-thematic aspects, variants
and specific solutions, and repetition of these leads to subthemes.
The themes evolve thanks to these transformations. These aspects
of emergence and evolution are the major difference in approach
between Bernard Tschumi's folies for Parc de la Villette in Paris
- here the red folies could be configured precisely on the green
grass within the blueprint of strict rules of play - and the façades
that Palladio designed for three churches beside the Canale della
Giudecca in sixteenth-century Venice.
The three façades are not identical, but in orientation
and in composition, colour and material they have a lot in common.
It was above Palladio's approach that was the reference for Archipelontwerpers
in developing the stepping-stone strategy in Scheveningen. It
was not until after they had received commissions from two different
clients, followed after a while by a third, to design penthouses
on top of an old warehouse that the opportunity spontaneously
arose of playing a game of references, by which a certain theme
was introduced, though all of this took place without the explicit
formulation of any rules beforehand. So the stepping-stone strategy
is a game of references under construction rather than a developed
system within which the rules of play have to be followed. Given
the specific (technical) properties of every raised ground level
and the at times highly personal preferences regarding the rooftop
home, such tight rules would be undesirable. (see the publication:
Rooftop Architecture, Ed Melet & Eric Vreedenburgh, NAi Publishers,
ISBN 90-5662-363-X)
IPSV
voorbeeld project
Belvedere subsidie