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The following text and images are courtesy the Aga
Khan Award for Architecture, for the award-winning design
of the Royal
Netherlands Embassy in Ethiopia by Dick
van Gameren and Bjarne Mastenbroek. [Google Earth link]
The Royal Netherlands Embassy complex lies amidst the urban
sprawl on the southern outskirts of Addis Ababa, enclosed
within a dense eucalyptus grove. The architects’ guiding principle
was to preserve and respect the topography
of the surrounding landscape while addressing the functional
requirements of a working embassy. They took care to maintain
existing contour lines and leave the vegetation and wildlife
undisturbed.
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The main
building, an elongated horizontal volume, cuts across
the sloping terrain on an east– west axis. Walls, floors and
ceilings are pigmented the same red-ochre as the Ethiopian
earth and are uniformly composed of concrete, creating the
effect of a cave-like space,
reminiscent of the rock-hewn architecture of Ethiopia. By
contrast, the roof garden
with its network of shallow pools alludes to a Dutch water
landscape. |
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An unashamedly contemporary and
simple organization of spaces,
the Dutch Embassy in Addis Ababa overcomes the complexities
of security and surveillance normally associated with the
design of embassy compounds, intersecting with the landscape
to create new and unexpected relationships with the host site
-- a walled eucalyptus grove in the city. The massif architecture,
at once archaic and modern, belongs as much to the Muslims,
Christians and the indigenous tribes of Ethiopia as it does
to its Dutch homeland. |
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In its conception and daily operation,
the building responds to its social and physical context with
inventive design and poetic sensibility. This is an architecture
that works with its environment, reducing the use of mechanical
services and relying instead on natural ventilation and high
insulation. The project’s sensitivity to process has left
its mark in the raw character
of its formation -- another delicate reminder of how buildings,
as formations of material culture, can register and enhance
spaces of encounter.
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Royal Netherlands Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia by Dick van Gameren and Bjarne
Mastenbroek |
2007.09.24 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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