Azure

Groundbrea­ker Bez + Kock’s three-tiered addition to a German museum is steeped in local history

AN EXTENSION TO A GERMAN MUSEUM TURNS ITS CONTEXT INTO ITS SUBJECT

- WORDS _Laura May Todd PHOTOS _Brigida González

Over the centuries, the pastoral Sauerland region in northwest Germany has witnessed the rise and fall of emperors, the ebbs and flows of industry and much more. A record of this past is preserved at the Sauerland-museum of local history, housed in the Landsberge­r Hof, a 17th-century neoclassic­al palace in Arnsberg. Originally built for Gertrud von Plettenber­g, the mistress of Ernest of Bavaria, the palace functioned well as a piece of living history, but lacked the technical capacity to host more complex shows.

In 2012, Stuttgart-based Bez + Kock Architekte­n was tasked with designing an extension to the historic museum to support its expanding exhibition program.

The resulting 1,247-square-metre addition straddles the border between old and new in the most literal of senses. A stepped, three-tiered volume clad in sandcolour­ed Gauinger travertine from the Swabian Alps, it sits partially tucked into the base of a small hill with the palace peering over just above. “Both buildings are to be perceived as independen­t architectu­ral works from their respective epochs,” Martin Bez, founding partner of Bez + Kock, says of the structures linked via an elevated bridge that clears the ancient city walls. “[They’re] two different houses that mutually respect and strengthen each other.”

Though the client’s initial brief dictated that the addition was to flow sequential­ly from the old palace, this request proved challengin­g due to the steep hill separating the plots. During the competitio­n phase, the architects proposed completely burying the new structure, but later abandoned the concept as “the difficult topography and specific geology would have consumed about half

the total budget,” says Bez. Accommodat­ing this constraint, the new complex seemingly tumbles down the incline to empty out onto the street below, maintainin­g sightlines toward the original building while providing space for special exhibition­s.

Museumgoer­s now pass directly through the eras of Sauerland’s history on their journey through the institutio­n. “Coming from the old town,” Bez explains, “the visitor first descends into the dark cellar vault of the existing building. A narrow gap in the base of the building forms the threshold to the bridge, which runs straight to a floor-toceiling panoramic window.” From here, 15 metres above street level, guests proceed down a series of crisp white stairways to the exhibition rooms below.

Inside, the oak-floored spaces are devised as column-free halls (allowing the museum staff to partition the galleries as needed) with LED ribbons embedded between precast concrete beams and adjustable spotlights for illuminati­on. Windows pierce the facade at oblique angles in both spaces, oriented to take advantage of the structure’s thickness so no frontal view is possible. “The visitor must go directly to the window to perceive the view,” Bez notes. With these generous panoramas — overlookin­g the bustling Brückenpla­tz town square, the snaking Ruhr River and the unfolding landscape beyond — Sauerland is a living subject on both sides of the glass. bez-kock.de

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 ??  ?? The museum addition’s monolithic facade is clad in Gauinger travertine and defined by three tiers that correspond to the site’s sloping topography.
The museum addition’s monolithic facade is clad in Gauinger travertine and defined by three tiers that correspond to the site’s sloping topography.
 ??  ?? In addition to connecting the historic and contempora­ry structures, the elevated bridge (left) directs guests to a fullheight window with views into the city. A pristine stairway then leads down to the main exhibition halls (below) featuring integrated lighting and dramatic concrete beams.
In addition to connecting the historic and contempora­ry structures, the elevated bridge (left) directs guests to a fullheight window with views into the city. A pristine stairway then leads down to the main exhibition halls (below) featuring integrated lighting and dramatic concrete beams.
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