The contestants in
stage two are David Chipperfield and Christoph Felger, Gert Wingårdh of Wingårdh Arkitektkontor and Johan Celsing of Johan Celsing Arkitektkontor.
The Nobel Prize is
probably known as the most significant global prize for outstanding human
achievements in science, literature and peacemaking in the world. Since 1901
when the first prizes were assigned the Nobel Prize has ever since been
associated with integrity, autonomy and freedom, fostering the ideals of a just
and peaceful world still reflecting the virtues and aspirations of Alfred Nobel
as stated in his will from 1895.
The decision to
build a Nobel Center
in Stockholm is
both related to the desire to finally have a home for the Nobel Prize, but also
to create the opportunity to relate to the people in the world beyond the myth
of the award itself.
The new Nobel Center
is not only a starting point to consolidate the admirable past in one place for
the first time in the history of the Nobel Prize, but to use this consolidation
to built a foundation from which to move on into a new era of openness and
outreach, in which the achievements of the Nobel Prize and its ideals not only
are preserved and made available to historians, but become an active and lively
source of inspiration for generations to come, to not give up the hope and the
believe that human accomplishments can contribute to a better world.
Architectural
considerations always form part of urban considerations and vice versa. This is
particularly true for this project with its most prominent setting in the
centre of Stockholm.
The exposed location on Blasieholmen next to the National Museum
functions almost like a stage for the city, where manifold views to the city,
but also manifold views from the city into the site are possible.
The site is both
part and not part of the city fabric. In a figurative sense this interrelation
of both looking in and out or being part as well as not being part reflects
notions of the essence of science and literature as well as the Nobel idea and
as such form a dialectic basis for the approach of the conceptual development.
Nobel House – Nobelhuset
The placement of the
new building as a freestanding ‘solitaire’ is fundamental to the urban and
architectural considerations reflecting the notion of a ‘house’ as a civic
building. In this way the identity of the new institution is established tying
in harmoniously with the immediate urban context on Blasieholmen.
The conception of an
auditorium, which receives its outstanding nature by the role it plays for the
building, for Blasieholmen, the city and the world – being placed at the
highest point of the new Nobel building. The entire Nobel auditorium becomes a
‘grand space’ with large panoramic windows allowing for maximum daylight as
well as dramatic views over the city. In this way the auditorium as the new
‘Nobelsalen’ establishes a public presence crowning the building not merely by
architectural form but by the experience of human interaction.
The creation of a
large public garden in the southern area of the site – exploiting the openness
of the site in relation to its visibility and the course of the sun connecting
the eastern and western waterfronts of Blasieholmen and thereby giving a major
new public realm to the citizens of Stockholm. A soft undulating tiering of the
topography towards the quay following a more natural flow of form characterizes
the new public Nobel
Garden.
Nobel Path – Nobel Gång
The introduction of a public path through the building starting from an open public ground floor and leading towards the Nobel Auditorium connecting as well as organising all programmatic functions and thereby establishing what the Nobel House is about – a dynamic place of encounter, exploration, representation and inspiration.
The introduction of a public path through the building starting from an open public ground floor and leading towards the Nobel Auditorium connecting as well as organising all programmatic functions and thereby establishing what the Nobel House is about – a dynamic place of encounter, exploration, representation and inspiration.









No comments:
Post a Comment
What do you think?