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Click
on images for larger color views. [Google Earth link]
Located on a prominent site
in the center of The Hague in The Netherlands, the Spuimarkt
combines cinemas, a supermarket and other retail into a large
block whose openings, massing, and materiality belies its
size. Designed by Münster, Germany-based BOLLES+WILSON
with local architect Bureau
Bouwkunde for
ING Vastgoed, the shopping center elevates itself above
similar projects in other cities by carefully addressing the
urban context.
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The architects describe the Spuimarkt
as a "permeable block," acknowledging the transient
movement of visitors within the building's various spaces,
what they further call the "tides and eddies of shoppers."
They turn this flow of people into a spectacle via a Piranesian
space of escalators at the main
entrance on the north, on Grote Marktstraat. This space
is carved from the building mass, brightly
illuminated at night to attract tourists and residents
alike into the cinemas on the upper floors. It's refreshing
to see that selective glazing
provides a connection to the city for those inside Spuimarkt,
unlike many malls that opt for hermetically sealed environments. |
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By locating the cinemas on the
upper floors -- a decision that makes sense structurally,
due to the longer spans of these spaces -- the architects
create a stepped profile that
rises in the center of the block. The architects further describe
this roof silhouette "like a topographic landform...that
gives measure and scale to the [city's] skyline." The
overall effect is one where no view or side of the building
resembles another, as if the whole building cannot be taken
in at a single glance because its layered massing changes
as one moves about the surrounding streets. |
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The massing effectively reduces
the overall scale of the shopping center, helping it recede
into its urban context, a condition aided by the materials
used on the exteriors. Brick is the primary material, rendered
in alternating horizontal and vertical stacking, a subtle
checkerboard pattern (image at left) with the added complexity
of a faint banding. Stone provides a fitting contrast to the
brick at the building's base. Generous glazing and colorful
banding wrapping the theaters combine with the masonry to
create a well-composed project that is more than just the
sum of its parts.
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Spuimarkt in The Hague, Netherlands
by BOLLES+WILSON |
2009.06.29 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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