Vortex
https://urbannext.net/vortex/

Vortex

Posted on July 5, 2017 by content

Categories: , , , , , , , ,

"We live in times of great turbulence. Movements that normally cannot be seen are now taking shape and happening unexpectedly. Things that appeared to be clear now become unclear. In the absence of external forces, friction within flows will self organize into a collection of so-called irrotational vortices."

The Todays Art Festival in The Hague occurs in a critical moment in the political and cultural life of The Hague where multi-million-euro architectural projects are being approved alongside dramatic budget cuts to smaller cultural institutions. Following previous experiments, this contradiction led us to propose a structure for the festival entirely made out of discarded materials, a vortex shaped structure expressing this idea of a natural force that sucks everything in its path. This structure would serve as a meeting point/festival center on the Spuiplein, the major public square in the center of The Hague and heart of the festival.

Raumlaborberlin joined forces with local garbage architects Refunc in organizing materials and building the structure. By tapping in to The Hague’s material flows we managed to obtain three containers of pallets, which were temporarily diverted to our working site for six days before returning back into their own life cycle. These three containers are the equivalent of what the supplier collects each day. The vortex thus becomes a materialization and temporary solidification of the local material flows.

The vortex rises from the ground in a circular motion and flows into itself seven metres above ground creating a covered space which is used for experimental live acts and the main bar for the festival.

 

Vortex – urbanNext Skip to content

Audio Version

See more about

More info

Architects: Raumlaborberlin, Refunc, Denis Oudendijk and Jan Körbes

By invitation of: TodaysArt Festival 2012

Vortex

“We live in times of great turbulence. Movements that normally cannot be seen are now taking shape and happening unexpectedly. Things that appeared to be clear now become unclear. In the absence of external forces, friction within flows will self organize into a collection of so-called irrotational vortices.”

The Todays Art Festival in The Hague occurs in a critical moment in the political and cultural life of The Hague where multi-million-euro architectural projects are being approved alongside dramatic budget cuts to smaller cultural institutions. Following previous experiments, this contradiction led us to propose a structure for the festival entirely made out of discarded materials, a vortex shaped structure expressing this idea of a natural force that sucks everything in its path. This structure would serve as a meeting point/festival center on the Spuiplein, the major public square in the center of The Hague and heart of the festival.

Raumlaborberlin joined forces with local garbage architects Refunc in organizing materials and building the structure. By tapping in to The Hague’s material flows we managed to obtain three containers of pallets, which were temporarily diverted to our working site for six days before returning back into their own life cycle. These three containers are the equivalent of what the supplier collects each day. The vortex thus becomes a materialization and temporary solidification of the local material flows.

The vortex rises from the ground in a circular motion and flows into itself seven metres above ground creating a covered space which is used for experimental live acts and the main bar for the festival.

 

Architects: Raumlaborberlin, Refunc, Denis Oudendijk and Jan Körbes

By invitation of: TodaysArt Festival 2012

urbanNext (March 29, 2024) Vortex. Retrieved from https://urbannext.net/vortex/.
Vortex.” urbanNext – March 29, 2024, https://urbannext.net/vortex/
urbanNext July 5, 2017 Vortex., viewed March 29, 2024,<https://urbannext.net/vortex/>
urbanNext – Vortex. [Internet]. [Accessed March 29, 2024]. Available from: https://urbannext.net/vortex/
Vortex.” urbanNext – Accessed March 29, 2024. https://urbannext.net/vortex/
Vortex.” urbanNext [Online]. Available: https://urbannext.net/vortex/. [Accessed: March 29, 2024]

urbanNext | expanding architecture to rethink cities and territories

Newsletter

Sign up to our newsletter

Search
Generic filters
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Search in excerpt
Formats
Audio&visual
Concept
Data
Essay
Forum
Lecture
Podcast
Project
Talk
Survey
Statement
Selfthink
High Density
Middle Density
Low Density
No Density

talk

essay

project

product

survey

data

all formats