Let’s Not Talk About Aesthetics from SLA Architects on Vimeo.
Landscape Architecture: SLA (Stig L. Andersson, Hanne Bruun Møller, Stine Poulsen, Lars Nybye Sørensen)
Location: Solbjergvej, Frederiksberg, Denmark
Client: Municipality of Frederiksberg
Collaborators: Lighting is designed in corporation with consultant engineers Hansen & Henneberg
Design phase: 2001-2004 Construction: 2002-2005
Area: 1,8 ha.
Cost of construction: 4,7 mill. €
Photos: Landezine
This entry was written by , posted on September 6, 2010 at 7:32 pm, filed under Parks, Squares, on the spot and tagged Copenhagen, Denmark, Water. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.
Design: White Achitecture /Fredrik Pettersson (head of project), Rasmus Skaarup, Pernille Vermund, Göran Wihl, Henrik Haremst, Johnny Gere
Completion: 2005
Floor area: 750 m2
Cost: € 940.000
Client: Tårnby Municipality
Photos: Landezine
Following photos: Ole Haupt, White arkitekter,
This entry was written by , posted on September 2, 2010 at 7:02 am, filed under Bath, Waterfronts, on the spot and tagged Copenhagen, Denmark. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.
Last year I posted pictures of Harbour bath in Copenhagen, last month I visited the site and made a few more photos. You can see how the wood is aging and some green carpets emerged I suppose due to safety precautions.
Architects: PLOT = BIG + JDS
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Area: 2,500 m²
Project year: 2003
Budget: US $787,000
JDS: If you walk across Langebro on a sunny Saturday afternoon in summer, you’ll see a very peculiar sight when looking down at the old industrial area on Islands Brygge. Hundreds of people dressed in swimwear are walking, standing, sunbathing and smiling about as if they were on a sandy beach far from the metropolis. In 2002 the Harbour Bath was opened as part of the Havneparken. In no time it developed into a unique oasis right in the middle of Copenhagen. People instantly loved it. City harbours are usually not associated with fresh swimming water. Old swimming baths at Langebro closed down in 1953 because of poor water quality. Bathing is now without health risks thanks to the improved water quality. With 42 km of wharf in the harbour the city’s revitalization “Blue Plan” is working on making room for houseboats, promenades, water sports, recreation areas and playgrounds in the entire harbour space. Copenhageners now pack towels and swimwear in their briefcases. They might fancy a swim.
This entry was written by , posted on September 1, 2010 at 10:31 pm, filed under Bath, Playscapes, Waterfronts, on the spot and tagged Copenhagen, Denmark, Water. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.
Landscape Architecture: SLA
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Client: Harald Simonsens Ejendomsselskab
Team: Stig L. Andersson, Hanne Bruun Møller, Lars Nybye Sørensen
Collaborators: Lundgaard & Tranberg
Design phase: 2003 Construction: 2003-2004
Area: 1,3 ha.
Cost of construction: 1,1 mill. €
Photos: Landezine
This entry was written by , posted on August 31, 2010 at 1:01 pm, filed under Gardens, on the spot and tagged Copenhagen, Denmark. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.
Project: Nicolai Kulturcenter
Landscape Architecture: Kristine Jensen
Location: Kolding, Denmark
Year of completion: 2007
Client: Community of Kolding
Area: 3,400m²
Cost: 670,000€
Photos: Landezine
Indoor:
This entry was written by , posted on August 30, 2010 at 1:14 pm, filed under Playscapes, Squares, on the spot and tagged Denmark, Kolding, Trip. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.
Location: Christianshavn, Copenhagen, Denmark
Client: AB Lagkagehuset
Team: Stig L. Andersson, Ulla Hornsyld, Rikke Geertsen, Hanne Bruun Møller
Design phase: 2007
Construction: 2008
Area: 550 m2
SLA has designed a courtyard with curvy, bodily shapes which contrasts the edgy appearance of the building. It has the rounded shapes of a painter’s palette. But instead of paint, the substance of the colours consists of different kinds of vegetation in altering heights. As a cornucopia of colours and changing foliage the courtyard garden becomes a big splash of Nature in the middle of the building, creating a completely new sense of place. The framing of the different floral fragments generates with the shifting heights a dynamic and unified whole. And the multiple organic typologies conceive various spaces and modes of use while the courtyard with its changing texture becomes a changeable sensory experience.

This entry was written by , posted on July 10, 2009 at 4:53 pm, filed under Gardens, Playscapes and tagged Copenhagen, Denmark. Leave a comment or view the discussion at the permalink.