The Therme (also known as thermal
baths or hot springs ) designed by Peter Zumthor
in Vals, Switzerland ,
has gone down in the history of architecture as a "lesson in courage and
aesthetics". As early as 1998, two years after opening, it was listed as a
historic building. From outside the hotel appears as a self confident ensemble
comprised of four buildings completed in 1969. The building composition is
unpretentious and functional. The three ancillary buildings and the main
building are witnesses of an architectural epoch revitalised through accents of
timeless design.
.mountain .stone
.water
building in the stone,
building with stone, into the mountain, building out of the mountain, being inside
the mountain ; how can the implications and the sensuality in the association
of these words be interpreted, architecturally ? The whole concept was designed
by following up these questions ; so that it all took form step by step.
Peter Zumthor
Stone by stone. A massive
element set in to the gradient of the slope and dovetailed with the flank of
the mountain. The great slabs of the roof are grassed over: sections of flower
studded alpine meadow.
The architectonic language of
the new spa has nothing to do with the design of the hotel complex built in the
sixties. It is more profound underlining the essential in the context of a new
interpretation of the constructional challenge; emphasising the special
relationship of the new Therme to the primordial forces of nature and the
geology of the mountainscape, reacting to the impressive topography of the
valley and the position of the warm spring which rises out of the primeval
mountain just behind the new spa.
The remote alpine village of Vals
is best known to the world as the home of Switzerland ’s popular Valser
mineral water. Since 1996, though, architecture fanatics and spa connoisseurs
have known Vals as the home of Peter Zumthor’s Therme spa, an ultra-modernist
design statement in grey Valser quartzite, a place that somehow crafts a
near-religious experience out of little more than stone, water and judiciously
applied light. The combinations of light and shade, open and enclosed spaces
and linear elements make for a highly sensuous and restorative experience.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.