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Click
on images at left for larger color views. [Google Earth link]
The long history of Hotel
Seeburg in Lucerne, Switzerland is immediately apparent:
a three-story, 19th-century building and a six-story, 20th-century
building sit astride the recent structure by Scheitlin_Syfrig
+ Partner. The Jesuit courtyard and gardens date back
to the 18th century, when the estate was used as a summer
retreat. In addition to the hotel's function, Lake Lucerne
and the Alps unite these historical pieces, as each addresses
this landscape in some way.
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The 2003 addition contains the
hotel lobby and front desk
as well as a restaurant, lounge,
and meeting room. The restaurant juts towards the water's
edge with a large window overlooking
the lake and the mountain scenery beyond, recalling many luxury
hotels that take advantage of their natural surroundings.
The meeting room accomplishes
the same via its generous glazing. |
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Both the restaurant and meeting
room take on a double meaning when seen in relation to the
hotel context: the real view out the window recalls a painted
view in the Panoramasaal in the old building. Additionally,
at night each becomes inverted as the become views from the
outside, giving those strolling along the lake a glimpse of
the dining and business
taking place inside. |
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The addition's simple geometries,
contemporary materials, and dark colors place it in opposition
to not only the 19th-century building but the more-recent
building with its suites overlooking the lake. This opposition
is merely aesthetic, though, as the interior effectively links
the two buildings and its low massing plays down this opposition.
Ultimately it extends the focus of the previous buildings
to the utmost as it brings the distant mountain views inside
via the expansive glass.
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Hotel Seeburg in Lucerne, Switzerland
by Scheitlin_Syfrig + Partner |
2007.02.12 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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