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Diener & Diener - Switzerland City Museum Aarau Schlossplatz 23, Aarau 2006 - 2015 |
Since 1939, the historic walls of the Aarau castle are housing the local town museum. The historic building is a mighty tower of relatively large boulders. This tower existed already before the founding of the city of Aarau in the 13th century. This also explains its location outside the town walls to the east of the historic centre. The building therefore provides the perfect setting for the mediation and illustration of the history of the city. However, the historic building was no longer up to date with the contemporary requirements of a museum. In particular there was missed a large room for temporary exhibitions, which could also address contemporary issues. The use of the historic rooms for a flexible exhibition design was quite restricted, and large areas of the available spaces are lasting occupied by the permanent collection. In order to adapt the museum to the current requirements, a competition was launched. In the year 2007 the architectural office Diener & Diener won the first prize in cooperation with Martin Steinmann. Two years later, the expansion of the city museum was approved in a popular vote. In April 2015, the extension as well as the renovated tower were inaugurated. The architects did not plan the additional volume within the given competition perimeter (east of the castle tower), but to the west of the tower. In their explanatory report to the competition, the architects emphasized that the location was chosen out of respect for the historically grown urban structure. With this choice of the building site it should be avoided that the castle enters a historically false relationship to the buildings of the so-called Laurenzenvorstadt. This important decision perseved one of the few places from which the topography of Aarau is experienced. This urban resetting results in a new composed castle square which features a spatially concise definition. The choosen building site allowed a serious connection between old and new, especially since the terrain profile at this location allowed to design the addition as an annex to the historic tower. The advantages of an annex instead of an addition docked to the historic building by means of a bridge or other auxiliary structures, becomes obvious in the interior organisation of the project. A generous stairwell with elevator serves as a joint and gives access to both buildings. The complexity of this stairwell becomes obvious in the sectional drawings, the show the different number of floors and different floor heights. The building consists of four stacked rooms with approximately the same floor plan. At street level there is a large foyer, in the basement is located a photo and movie room, on the upper floor is the exhibition hall and on the roof one encounters the administration which appears as a glazed top. The exterior walls of the exhibition space on the upper floor are completely closed, and the room receives partially light from above. The top floor, where the offices are organized, is realized as a lightweight construction, which differs from otherwise solid building. This lightweight construction is experienced as an attic, which refers to the adjacent buildings. A special feature of the extension is the design of the facade with figurative ornamentation. When it was proved that a 120-year-old sequoia tree had to be cut for the expansion of the museum, the architects decided to call in the sculptor Josef Felix Müller. He was entrusted with the design of the facade, and all what was left over from the tree was harnessed for the architecture. The trunk of the mammoth tree was sawn into planks, and Müller made them into image panels, measuring 200 cm x 95 cm. These reliefs were used as templates for matrices from which concrete elements were cast for the facade. Unlike in historical buildings, the figures were not specifically applied to key points, but were spread all over the entire main façade, so that it is actually captured by the figures. Contrary to the logic of prefabrication, in this building each of the 134 elements with its own figure is unique. These abstract figures are considered to represent the different characters of the Swiss society, and thus also refer to the democratic tradition |