“Folkwang University of the Arts is home to one of the largest
musicological collections in Germany.
Until now, its inventory of approximately 190,000 items of sheet music, sound
recordings, images, books and other media has been stored in various archives
and libraries across the region.
But now,
musicological items from three institutions - Folkwang University,
the former Library of Musicology at the Ruhr University Bochum as well as the
music education department of the University Duisberg-Essen - have been brought
together under a single roof, in a new building designed by Swiss-born
architect Max Dudler. Situated on the Werden campus, the library was
inaugurated at the end of September 2012. Folkwang University
of the Arts is North Rhine Westphalia’s college of art and music.
Its main campus
is housed in the former Benedictine abbey of St. Ludgerus in Essen-Werden,
situated in the southern Ruhr
Valley. The small 8th
century site was extended into a princely baroque residence in the 18th
century, arranged around a magnificent courtyard (Cour d’honneur). The
construction of the new library on the south side of the courtyard by Max
Dudler replaces a 19th century military hospital building demolished in 1969.
In 2006, Max
Dudler won the design competition organized by the Duisburg branch of the Building and Real
Estate Management Authority, North Rhine Westphalia. The project was generously
supported by the Alfried Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach Foundation. In 1811,
while under French occupation, a prison was set up in Werden Abbey. The
Prussians extended this and erected a hospital building on the south side of
the courtyard. Upon the demolition of the hospital building, the remaining
ensemble of buildings looked unbalanced.
Without
reproducing the original shape of the prison, the new building encloses this
side of the courtyard with its voluminous crystalline structure. The new
building’s eastern side adjoins the so-called administrative wing of the old
abbey. The volume of the new building corresponds approximately to that of the
Prussian wing across the courtyard. Folkwang Library was conceived as a
monolithic body built atop the level base of an old rough stone wall. Max
Dudler’s concept for the building is based on the idea of the ‘museum
showcase’: An exterior shell protecting the valuable contents within.
The functional
areas are grouped around the reading room, which lies at the center of the
building. The book shelves are arranged in strict order around this room,
thereby lending scale and structure to the building as a whole. There are two
entrances to the library: The main entrance is from the courtyard via a flight
of external steps, designed to approximate the style of the entrances to the
other buildings leading off from the courtyard. The library’s other entrance on
the Klemensborn serves as an emergency exit. Lending desks, media cubicles, an
administration area and cloakroom are situated on the ground floor; the reading
room on the first floor. The compact archives are housed in the library’s
basement.
The design of
the building’s facade was developed in collaboration with the photographer
Stefan Müller. Every pane of glass in the facade depicts a large format
close-up of a quarry. These photographs reproduce the unhewn stone in its
original size. The photographic works were applied directly onto the glazing
using a special technique. In keeping with the elemental meaning of the number
twelve in music, twelve motives were pieced together into an overall
composition.
As with the
scagliola technique of the Renaissance used to create stucco marbling, this
special photographic technique creates the illusion of the facade being
fashioned from the stone material itself. At the same time, a tension is
created between the imagery of the textured stone and the flat surface of the
glass, reminiscent of the historical sgraffito technique, whereby a graphic
embossing is etched into a smooth plaster surface. The new building’s smooth
glass surfaces create the perfect impression of a polished monolith.
But this is
called into question by the translucency of the building’s exterior, thereby
playfully breaking the boundaries both from inside and out. Silhouettes of
people can be seen beyond the facade. The interior is bathed in a soft,
filtered light. In the evening, the building illuminates the courtyard outside.
The building comprises a reinforced concrete skeleton with concrete cores to
provide stiffening. The glass facade is attached to the building’s projecting
structural slabs using the mullion-transom system. The concrete pillars are
shaped and positioned according to the dimensions of the book shelves.
The pillars are
clad in cherry wood, which is also used for the shelving in the reading room.
Not all the pillars are load-bearing. Some are used as part of an ‘inert’
air-conditioning system. With the ventilation pipes being channeled directly
through the reinforced concrete ceilings, this building material’s potential as
a heat sink is thereby put to good use. Through coupling this with a heat
exchanger, an innovative contribution to energy efficiency is achieved.
The library
furnishings – such as its tables, chairs and shelves – were also designed by
Max Dudler.”
Project Description from Max
Dudler:
Location: Essen-Werden, Germany
Architect: Max Dudler
Project
Manager: Alexander Bonte
General
Planners during the Construction Period: Nattler Architects
Structural
Engineers: Leonhardt, Andrä und Partner – Beratende Ingenieure VBI, GmbH, Berlin
Building
Services: Winkels Behrens Pospich – Ingenieure für Haustechnik GmbH Münster
Construction
Physics / Acoustics: Müller-BBM GmbH Berlin
Gross
Surface Area: 1,707 m2
Year:
2009-2011












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