LANDFORMS AND ARTFORMS
Transcription
LANDFORMS AND ARTFORMS
GH-8156842269 LANDFORMS AND ARTFORMS GUGGENHEIM HELSINKI - An Urban Archipelago Site Plan 1:2000 The maritime location in the heart of the Southern Harbour of Helsinki offers a truly unique setting for the internationally In the south-west, Tähtitornivuorenpuisto park, serves as a green lung in the city – a recreational hideout overlooking It’s a condition that is worth conveying to a larger audience - a condition that represents the Finnish cultural heritage perception of the archipelago, and this project aspires to convey that perception to the visitor of the museum. roundabout in the south of the site, thus eliminating the large scar that otherwise would be created between the conditions and influences that merge at this specific point in the very heart of the city. The unique condition is connection down to the harbour front in the east side of the park. from the Finnish culture as subtle combinations of physical qualities and establishes itself as an open civic cultural (the tree) erected on top. The volumes are positioned furthest north on the site, emphasizing the urban condition new Guggenheim museum will truly become an attractive anchor point in Helsinki’s urban fabric, supporting soft known Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundations Helsinki initiative. The setting is created by an exceptional clash of created by the confluence of the urban centre in the north, the archipelago and the harbour in the south-east, and the lush Tähtitornivuorenpuisto Park in the south-west. These three site-specific contextual conditions merge at the site and serves as a vital foundation for the establishment of the new museum, the Guggenheim Helsinki. The urban context of the southern harbour is characterized by a variety of architectural traditions, ranging from Neoclassicism and Finnish Jugend to Functionalism and Nordic Classicism. All of these styles have their own Finnish characteristics, they all play an essential role in how we perceive the city of Helsinki today. the city and the harbour front. It is a destination well connected to the city in the north and west but lacks a natural To the south-east of Helsinki, the surrounding waters are embellished by a stunning archipelago of islands, rocks and reefs. The city itself is in fact largely located on islands. It is an unexampled environment, exclusive in its nature, only found in a few places in the world, an environment accessible only for a few. It is an environment particularly exclusive in its natural and environmental qualities. The perception of walking on an uninhabited granite island under the treetops, inhaling the fresh sea breeze and overlooking the sea of islands is an extraordinary and rare experience. It is a condition in which the Finnish culture is deeply rooted, a condition the Finns are very proud of. and can be seen represented in many forms of Finnish culture. Consequently The Guggenheim Helsinki thrives node in the very heart of the Finnish capital on a site that is flanked by the city, the park and the sea. “The Urban Archipelago” project builds on the idea of bringing the subtle qualities of the Finnish archipelago into the new Guggenheim museum. The conceptualisation of the project is based on studies of the “typologies” of the archipelago and introduces these to the way the museum is experienced and composed. The typologies range from vegetated rock based islands and underwater reefs, to smaller sand-based atolls with little vegetation and vegetationless skerries and cliffs that pierce through the sea surface. All of these together contribute to the unique The majority of the new museum´s program is located in the heavy plinth (the granite island) and in the light volume between the market hall, the urban blocks and the museum. Further south, the archipelago landscape responds to its context. Towards the Tähtitornivuorenpuisto park the islands become more lush and create a natural connection to the park while towards the harbour, the islands of the archipelago landscape acquire more of the character of the sea. The landscape is elevated onto the level of Laivasillankatu street in order to the enable a natural connection from the park down to the harbour front, stitching the sea, the park and the city together. The infrastructural access to the existing port operations as well as the service access to the museum is relocated to the area of the The Hill The City the Shore the Shallow Betula (assorted) Ammophilia Arenaria Phragmites Australis Plantago Lanceolata Armeria Maritima Schenoplectus Tabernaemontani museum and Laivasillankatu street and the Tähtitornivuorenpuisto park. By placing the access further south, the traffic and public transportation; Laivasillankatu Street will become attractive as an urban and lush street instead of a complicated infrastructural intersection. The Guggenheim Helsinki Museum, a natural destination in the city that reaches out and mediates between the site’s preconditions in between the city, the archipelago and the park. It becomes a museum that resonates with the local citizens, the people of Finland, as well as the international visitors who want to experience extraordinary contemporary art in a truly unique environment, on an island under the treetops, in the Finnish archipelago. The Sea The Archipelago - A network of islands The Park “The Reef” Bridging the gap between the archipelago and the city The city of Helsinki is surrounded by the stunning archipelago and its beautiful islands. By bringing in the values of the archipelago into the city, The Guggenheim introduces a new, unexpected urban condition that bridges the gap between the mainland and the islands. Thereby the Guggenheim Helsinki will manifest a new platform, a network of exhebition spaces for art embedded in the urban fabric of Helsinki. Site Elevation 1:1000 The Museum meets the city, the park and the sea The Guggenheim Helsinki concists of a coherent exhibition network that mediates with its surrounding context; the lush Tähtiorninvuorenpuisto park in the west, the bay in the east as well as the urban context in the north. “The Cliff” “The Island” “The Shallow” The typologies of the archipelago The archipelago consists of a variety of types of islands, reefs, shallows and bedrocks that create a fantastic experiential diversity. These typologies function as the foundation for the design and brings Finnish values into the heart of the new Guggenheim museum. A lush urban landscape and a sculpture park The park places itself into the narrative of the Guggenheim museum, drawing upon references from the finnish archipelago. Divided into three main characteristics; the hill, the shore and the shallow, the park offers a rich palate of colors and textures, all year round. The archipelago landscape seen from the Observatory Park The museum, its landscape and the reconfigured Laivasillankatu street create a natural connection from the sea front to the park. The extended pedestrian deck flanks the border of the museum and becomes an attractive lush urban space that vitalizes the southern harbour of Helsinki. GH-8156842269 The Archipelago, Island, and the Tree for the people and a urban living room embedded in the urban fabric. The cantilevering wooden structure above cultures blend and exchange, thus vitalizing the urban environment of Helsinki. It will be a memorable experience the site as well as to generate a robust exhibition space that stands up to the demands of a world-class contemporary Guggenheim Helsinki specific spaces with significant views or spatial qualities. To enter in the main space / atrium park or from the city side via the art plaza. The overall building concept strives to procure local Finnish values contained in the specific atmosphere surrounding art museum and innovation centre. Guggenheim Helsinki will thus, not only be a building but become a coherent exhibition space consisting of a vast variety of spatial art “islands”, both outdoor and indoor within the Helsinki urban fabric hence becoming a natural destination for both the international art connoisseur as well as the curious art interested citizen of Helsinki or Finland. The surrounding landscape / sculpture park and the main building comprises a number of outdoor and indoor islands with different landscape and spatial characters. The outdoor islands forms a coherent sculpture park with attractions, besides the sculptures, such as a playground, amphitheatre, water elements, a lush grove for reading and recreation. The main building consists of a granite plinth, an open flexible public space and atrium with a large cantilevering wooden structure situated above. The plinth contains the museum and design store, black box performance/ conference hall, classroom / laboratory, general service functions and logistic functions. The in between open space, the plaza, contains the formal restaurant, bar, multipurpose zone, the significant atrium exhibition space as well as the semi-public sculpture terrace to ensure civic presence thereby making it a space the open space contains the main exhibition spaces, both robust generic white cube gallery spaces as well as of the Guggenheim Helsinki will be like arriving in a glade with a foliage leaf structure above your head. The Guggenheim Helsinki will thereby possess strong spatial identity as well as supply sufficient, robust exhibition spaces that can stand the demands of a world-class contemporary museum. A vibrant civic beacon in Helsinki The museum will, not only become a open and accessible destination to experience art once in a while, it will also be a civic meeting place where you absorb novel ideas, share your own or gather and socialize, with new acquaintances, friends or family. It should be a natural destination both for a short visit or when you spend your entire day exploring the latest curatorial ideas, performances, sculptures, installations or other types of fine art. It will be a bridge between the public, curators and artists, thus attracting new spectators and tourists. The prominent location makes it a natural destination, a specific pearl in the string of pearls conjoined with the other prominent waterfront locations close to the city’s historic centre as well as other cultural locations and institutions in central Helsinki. The Guggenheim art experience in Helsinki will be an archipelago / cluster of experiences where Water feature for the local Finnish audience as well as the international visitors arriving from the seaside through the sculpture Tram stop Flexibility and robustness The composition of the building is clearly divided in a plinth, in between space / the plaza, an office level and the main gallery space above. Dining (formal restaurant /café bar / kitchen By composing the building like this you have a non hierarchical work environment where you can work comfortably by yourself, in group rooms or seminar spaces with a short distance to either the below entrance level or the above Bike Parking gallery space. The whole building stands only on four cores thus creating a generous and robust free space on Multi-purpose zone Museum Plaza Flexible Exhibition space Visitor services top of the plinth. The cores support a huge, concrete one level cylinder, which contains the office functions and Atrium / Circulation provides floor space for the galleries above. This structural principle makes the gallery space virtually adaptable to any exhibition condition so that you can pull down and erect walls as you, curator or artist, would prefer. The natural Itäinenmakasiinikatu Shop entrance light condition within the museum comes from north facing studio windows / skylights as well as generous windows facing north and in some cases where necessary smaller ones with a set back facing south. The configuration of the spaces makes it robust and ready to exhibit the unknown, the unseen and the art of the future. Sculpture Terrace Roof structure Flexible Exhibition Space Entrance 1. The Archipelago, Island, and the Tree The basic compositional principle for the Guggenheim Helsinki building thrives from an ideal notion of a barren island in the Finnish archipelago. To stand in front of the sea on solid Finnish granite with a light foliage over your head perceiving the scaleless distant horizon to perceive inwards as well as outwards. Multi-purpose zone Exhibition Level 2 Generic exhibition space Exhibition Level 1 Main exhibition route Vertical circulation – Handicap, service and Installation circulation Specific exhibition space Formal Restaurant Office floor Flexible office space Outdoor serving area (Restaurant) 2. A vibrant civic beacon in the heart of Helsinki The museum will not only become a open and accessible destination to experience art once in a while, it will also be a civic meeting place where you share your ideas, gather and socialize, with new acquaintances, friends or with family. Laivasillankatu Wooden facade structure Sculpture terrace Multi purpose zone Kitchen Cafe/ Bar Museum plaza Atrium Flexible exhibition space Forest playground 3. A unique, multilateral art experience The Guggenheim Helsinki provides an open art platform with art visibile in the cityscape in numerous ways. The exhibition spaces are cinfigured as a sequence of mixed spaces in scale/dimension, light, views and texture providing intriguing possibilities to exhibit art in a vast variety of scales and medias in site specific spaces as well as in generic roubust white cubes. Main entrance Restaurant Terminal entrance Outdoor serving area (bar) Shop atrium Shop / Alternative entrance "The Reef" - herbs/rocks - rough landscape Load bearing cores Auditorium 4. Flexibility and robustness The composition of the building is clearly divided in a plinth, in between space / the public art plaza, an office level and the main exhibition space above. Exploded axonometry Kitchen "The Rock" Exploded axonometry - program Exploded axonometry - flow Entrance GH-8156842269 Staff Entrance Light yard Stock Room& Offices Museum and Design Store IT closet Stock Room& Offices Light yard Large Gallery 512 m2 Entrance Ticketing &Information Desk Gallery 217 m2 IT closet Visitor Screening Gallery 140 m2 Coat Check/Lockers Restroom Atrium Gallery ) 140 m2 Clean storage, depot Gallery 140 m2 Flexible Performance/ Conference Hall 275 movable seats Core Shared Art Prep Atrium Storage Gallery 180 m2 ffic tra Landscape equipment Art Storage ne zo al rn inte art Crate Storage on lati cu cir Uncrating/ Staging Gallery 160 m2 Shipping/ Receiving Atrium Gallery 420 m2 IT closet Multif. Classroom/ Restroom Gallery 165 m2 Kitchen Art loading dock 1:500 - 3rd Floor Lower Exhibition floor 11 Galleries - 2400 m2 Registrar General loading dock Exhibition Start 200 m2 Gallery 140 m2 Retail Programs & events Collections Storage and Management Visitor services Circulation / Unassigned Areas Dining Maintenance and Operations Exhibition Galleries Antechamber - Exhibition Galleries IT Closet / accessible walls Office 1:500 - Ground Floor Plan Diagram - 2nd Floor - Office plan Multi-purpose zone hvac A unique, multilateral art experience A gallery with a specific view overlooking the city and the cathedral of Helsinki A large (generic) gallery space with north-facing skylights By thriving on the local usage of wood and traditional Finnish craftsmanship the museum will obtain specific, Guggenheim Helsinki, always the possibility to take shortcuts back or forth from the main route if you want to revisit or skip some parts of the exhibition. museum, in the city, on the flexible exhibition plaza in front of the museum facing north towards the historic city or in the sculpture park In order to retain flexibility able to accommodate both known and unknown conditions, generic and specific exhibition situations, When you enter the museum, either through the museum and design store or in front from the quayside it’s easy to find help, buy a continuous sequence with differentiation in atmosphere, scale and light. We believe that it is of great importance to provide sculpture terrace. When you leave the atrium space you arrive a mezzanine level viewing the south harbour and the sculpture park large elevator with generous doors as well as a hidden traverse crane in the atrium. We suggest that the gallery space flooring within the museum. The main exhibition galleries provide a sequence of mixed spaces in scale/dimension, light, and texture providing that in time gives the museum tactile character. The slabs should be dimensioned to facilitate future maintenance and possible upcoming artists in intimate spaces as well as large robust spaces for contemporary group and solo shows in any media. The flow of character that would make maintenance, adjustments and renovations of the floors more forgiving. Between walls and in the exhibition spaces in combination with the robust unsurpassable generic white cube spaces. The exhibition begins already outside the The exhibition spaces and logistics on the south side or when arriving from the west side from the observatory park. we propose that the general spatial layout consists of variable spaces combined with fixed spaces. The spaces are planned as tickets at the front desk for the main exhibition galleries or just explore the art on display in the atrium, multipurpose zone or the generous installation possibilities via large demountable façade openings as well as ample vertical transportation such as a in the south. This space can serve as an ideal space for introductions to big groups or information space about the shows on display is made out of polished in situ casted concrete that would make drilling and specific adaptation possible with the wear and tear intriguing possibilities to exhibit art in a vast variety of scales and medias. The spaces are dimensioned to both display young and further grit grinding. The gravel in the concrete could be granite, sourced locally, to create a subtle yet noticeably Finnish the exhibition space is well thought out so that the spectator never feels that he or she could have missed anything, however there is shafts generous space is dedicated for routing of water, gas, electricity and other substances that could be needed to fulfil a certain art piece. Area calculation: 1-500 Long Section The Atrium - the heart of the museum Diagram - 4th floor - Upper Ehxibition Floor 1-500 Elevation East Total Areas: Ground Level (quay) 1st Floor (Plinth) 2nd Floor - Office & Exhibition 3rd Floor - Exhibition 4th Floor - Exhibition Total sqm (m2) Exhibition Programs and Events Multi-purpose zone Visitior Services Retail Dining 0 m2 580 m2 180 m2 450 m2 (incl. storage) 250 m2 (kitchen) 200 m2 - 2200 m2 - 1350 m2 - 4030 m2 580 m2 310 m2 180 m2 450 m2 720 m2 Offices Collections Storage and Management Maintenance and Operations 350 m2 25 m2 280 m2 310 m2 120 m2 (kitchen) + 150 m2 (restaurant) + Cafe bar 200 m2 - 550 m2 300 m2 - - 550 m2 350 m2 325 m2 Total Assigned Areas 1835m2 1060 m2 1050 m2 2200 m2 1350 m2 7495 m2 NORTH FACING ROOF LIGHTS GH-8156842269 RAIN GUTTER Terminal Park Origins Tram stop 2 3.5 A 3.5 2 3.5 Bicycle Parking KIASMA - GUGGENHEIM 3.5 A 2 Bike Port Access ramp Tram Vehicle Sidewalk 10 6.8 Terminal KIASMA - GUGGENHEIM Pedestrian deck FASCIA EDGE WOODEN LAMELLA Hotel Palace Museum Plaza Vehicle Platform Tram 2 2 2 Plaza 6 Sidewalk 2 Bike 4.5 Platform 4.5 B Execution WOODEN SILL 5.7 Vehicle Sidewalk 5.2 OOPPERA- KANSALLISMUSEO - KIASMA - GUGGENHEIMOLYMPIATERMINAALI Vehicle OOPPERA- KANSALLISMUSEO - KIASMA - GUGGENHEIMOLYMPIATERMINAALI Olympia Terminal B EXHIBITION GLAS FACADE Pedestrian deck Ramp to terminal area T-junction RAW, MATTE KURU GREY GRANITE SECONDARY STEEL SHADOW BOX SHOP ATRIUM SHOP / ALTERNATIVE ENTRANCE POLISHED, MATTE KURU GREY GRANITE 1-00 Facde detail 1-100 Facade of the entrance area Structural Feasibility The building is constructed on massive in-situ concrete piles. Four massive concrete towers rise from these foundations and atrium. The heavy concrete cores together with the one level tall concrete cylinder enable an extreme flexibility on the exhibition structure and also function as elevators, stair, technical and service shafts. Other spaces inside the main structure are supported with columns or walls which match the loadbearing structures of the continue through the entire building all the way to the roof structure. These concrete towers form the main vertical loadbearing The main horizontal loadbearing structure is constructed from the two lower slabs, connected by outer and inner circular shear walls or heavy steel diagonals. This structure will offer sufficiently rigid and durable foundations to upper parts of the building despite the long spans and cantilevers. The loads are transferred from curved shear walls to the towers radially by heavy concrete walls or steel diagonals. The central part of the lowest slab is thick massive concrete or honeycomb construction. Accessibility randomly strewn over the homogenous granite paving, thus creating a varied promenade, bordered more. Numerous factors contribute to the reduction of CO2 emissions. The only limit is our imagination Though inspired by it’s naturally occurring counterpart, this archipelago has a vibrant urban tone creating efficient solar shading or by maximizing the heat gain in the heavy structures of the building. denominator for all three typologies is the smooth cut granite floe, intersecting and interacting with If a sustainable building becomes too expensive to run, it has failed. Therefore, sustainability is just sculpture-plinths. This element also adds structure to the park at wintertime. expensive to build but less expensive to run. For sustainable architecture reduces the cost of both mirror, bringing the water of the bay within reach. Planting in the shallow is sparse, and consists of process for the development of the new Guggenheim Helsinki museum. Further towards the museum the character changes towards that of the shore. The shores are filled Social architecture is about creating a framework for good life. In the case of the new Guggenheim soil and salty water, spreading to fill the cracks and crevices appearing in the smooth rocks. full of life where everyone feels welcome. The new museum ought to be carefully integrated to its a very palpable way. This is the hill, covered in soft green grasses and wildflowers, intertwined with All three forms of sustainability (energy, economic, social) are equally important for the success of birches. At winter the wildflower meadow wilts and leaves only the dry stems of more sturdy perennials the park offers a rich palate of colors and textures, all year round. These typologies appear as islands nature’s own resources such as heat & light, about developing sustainable ways of living and much by intimate niches, social spaces, art and recreative functions. and a lot can already be achieved by orientating the building volume correctly in relation to the sun, by throughout, focusing on capturing an atmosphere rather than simply mimicking nature. The common Economic sustainability the other elements of the park. One simple shape, varied to create seating, stairs, water-mirrors and as much about making sure the architecture is economically sustainable. It doesn’t make it more Close to the harbour the park adopts the character of a shallow, especially visible in the large water- materials, transport, energy and maintenance. The economic sustainability must be and incorporated reeds, adding movement, sound and not least winter-interest to the horizon. Social sustainability with granite-rubble, protruded by rough grasses and hardy perennial flowers, well adopted to the poor museum in Helsinki it concerns the creation of a good urban spaces, both indoor and outdoor – spaces Closest to the park, the soil is richer, supporting a lush grove, connecting Guggenheim to the park in context and thereby become a natural destination in the future of the city. accessible spaces of mowed grass and softly shaded by the foliage of the light-permeable canopies of the new museum. These need to be a well-integrated aspect in the development of the Guggenheim to complement the well-known motive of slender birch-trunks protruding the snow. a lighter timber inner wall construction has also been studied. The exterior façade is made out of curved glue-laminated timber structures. The beams fixed with stainless steel joints, some of which support the load of the beams while others hold the beams in place and prevent deformation caused by moisture. Bike 5.2 5.7 4.5 4.5 the 2 Museum 6 2 2 within the city. A good connection between and2 the city centre is achieved by developing the tram network. A dedicated tramline by the name KIASMA – GUGGENHEIM would allow the Museum to be brought imaginatively from periphery of the city into the centre for all to see. The tramline would have its own tramcars with special interiors, where information about exhibition content and future exhibitions can be presented using video, and performances displayed. The tramline also connects two important contemporary art museums, KIASMA and GUGGENHEIM, together. The line continues northwards as far as the Opera house, and so the National Museum, too, connects to this cultural line. At its south end the tramline terminates at the Olympia terminal. A tram stop for the museum is positioned in front of the main entrance. Traffic arrangements Traffic lanes on Laivasillankatu are moved further from the Museum within the current scope of the street. In this way the disturbance to the Museum caused by traffic is minimized. The connection for heavy goods traffic to the ships is to be realized economically, as future development in the area may lead to relocation of the shipping docks and subsequently the development of the site for other uses. The route to the ships is achieved by ramp via the junction in front of the terminal. The same ramp is used for logistics and service traffic to the Museum. T-junction, with necessary turning lanes. This allows optimized use of space and connection to the ships for motor traffic. The tramline in the centre of Laivasillankatu is moved to the same side of the street as the Museum. In addition, a wide pedestrian and cycle route between the Olympia terminal and the market square, following the street part of the way and the tram line part of the way. Car parking is provided in the P-Tähtitorni car park, from which is a new, protected route directly to Museum entrance. Charter bus parking is located further away from the Museum. A protected bicycle parking area is located on and next to the Museum entrance on the front plaza. Figure 1. The main load-bearing structure is based on the idea of creating a super strong main structure that liberates the upper exhbition floors from inflexible static structures, thus enabling a robust and flexible platform for the arts. Figure 2. The load-bearing cylindrical concrete structure on the office floor. The radial walls transfer the shear forces from the exterior walls to the main towers. The inner columns, which are placed in two circles, support the upper exhibition floors and can be placed according the needs of structures above. Figure 3. The coloured areas are the places with small shear force. These areas are more suitable for creating large openings, windows and doors. Figure 4. Possible deflections will be manageble accorging to the preliminary ICT model calculations. 8. Principle longitudal section 1. High thermal mass plinth 2. Ground source heating 3. Service Cores (lift/stairs/hvac) 4. Stack effect natural vent. in atrium 5. Services in suspended ceiling 6. External solar shading 7. Kitchen integrated in the core 8. Openable roof light for vent. 9. Accessible walls in all galleries 10. IT closet 11. North facing roof lights 12. Photovoltaics integrated in the roof structure 13. Gallery lit by north-facing roof light 13. Ventilation 6. 9. 5. 5. 5. 5. 3. 7. 1. 4. Sectional Perspective of the museum Port Access ramp Helsinki Guggenheim museum, but also on how the museum could be linked and made accessible 12. 2. OOPPERA- KANSALLISMUSEO - KIASMA - GUGGENHEIMOLYMPIATERMINAALI The roundabout on Laivasillankatu in front of the Olympia terminal is changed to a traffic light controlled Helsinki project. possible and to keep the structure as simple as possible the external walls are formed in in-situ concrete. This construction also 6. Museum Plaza OOPPERA- KANSALLISMUSEO - KIASMA - GUGGENHEIMOLYMPIATERMINAALI Plaza It also about reusing waste materials from the building process, designing the building so that it utilizes part by the reduction of energy consumption, but sustainability is not only about energy consumption. Hotel Palace The project proposes to focus not only on the infrastructural situation in the immediate context of the Sidewalk the Finnish archipelago. Divided into three main characteristics; the hill, the shore and the shallow, Bike More than 40 percent of all CO2 emissions derive from buildings. These can be reduced to a certain 6.8 the Museum. Charter buses are served by a pick-up/drop-off stop with good pedestrian access to the 11. 10. 2 Tram Traffic, Infrastructure and mobility box beam-like structure, integrating the possibility to import diffuse light to the interior. offers a sufficiently firm base to suspend the facade with minimum amount of punctures in building envelope. The possibility of façade openings. The light-weight upper, bowl shaped, shell structure makes it possible to create large openings around the The landscape of the Guggenheim Sculpture Park The park places itself into the narrative of the Guggenheim museum, drawing upon references from structures. The roof is supported by columns and primary beams from the upper concrete slab. The roof is a self-supporting on the exhibition floors. Structural openings are easily achieved in the colored areas shown in figure 3 and are also possible The use of a diagonal steel bar solution for transferring the forces through the structure gives a flexibility concerning possible Hollistic sustainability Energy and recourses main structure below. It is possible to adjust the main loadbearing structure with reasonable tolerance in reference to the upper The inner surface of the external walls follows the shape on the facade. To keep the external traffic noise level as low as elsewhere with careful design. 3.5 10 floor above, constituting a robust platform for exhibiting art in all scales. On the edges of this thick curved panel strip are two rings of columns, which support the central parts of the upper halls. Concrete slabs with appropriate surface materials offer good point load resistance for moving and installing heavy objects 3.5 Platform PROJECT SPACE 2 Platform SCULPTURE TERRACE POLISHED, MATTE KURU GREY GRANITE 3.5 Vehicle GLAS FACADE SEAMLESS GLASS FITTING 3.5 Vehicle METAL SILL/ GLASS FITTING Watermirror reflecting enviroment as well as sculptures. Bringing the waterline within reach making it an interactive element of the park. Vehicle SUSPENDED CEILING (SERVICES) the Shallow Contrasting smooth cut granite with natural rubble. Adorned by grasses with varied textures and tactile qualities, derived from dry salty conditions of the crevices and shorelines of the archipelago. Tram GLASS FITTING 2 the Shore Vehicle the Hill Lush green hill, intersected by slivers of cut granite. Characterized by grasses and the light-permeable foliage of finnish birch-trees. KIASMA - GUGGENHEIM Pedestrian deck KIASMA - GUGGENHEIM Sidewalk OFFICE GLAS FACADE WOODEN LAMELLA Terminal Park Sidewalk GLASS FITTING Terminal Characteristics WOODEN SILL SUSPENDED CEILING (SERVICES) 3. Water & sunlight