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Related: Culture Forums, Support Forums"Simple and clear" service centre draws on roadside buildings in Norway
https://www.dezeen.com/2024/07/05/brunstranda-service-building-norway/Local studios Jørgen Tandberg Architecture and Vatn Architecture looked towards the simplicity of utilitarian roadside buildings when designing Brunstranda Service Building in Norway. Located in Lofoten, an archipelago in the north of Norway, the concrete service centre provides rest spaces and bathroom facilities for cyclists and surfers visiting the area. It replaces old and dilapidated facilities on the site, which is positioned beside a white sandy beach and bordered by the large mountain ranges of Flakstadøy.
Jørgen Tandberg Architecture and Vatn Architecture took visual cues from the straightforward forms of utilitarian buildings found along roads nearby in Norway for their design. This led to a pared-back, cuboidal volume for the centre, built with prefabricated concrete elements, including fourteen-metre-long beams, and a gridded facade. It is topped by a roof structure that extends beyond the walls, providing covered outdoor areas where tourists can shelter from the rain.
"The form of the building is simple and clear, with strong horizontal lines contrasting the wild landscape around it," architect Espen Vatn told Dezeen. "We like the ordinary utilitarian and unassuming buildings one finds along the roads in Norway," added architect Jørgen Tandberg. "Our project aims to refine and elevate aspects of these buildings into a contemporary structure."
Panels of glazing and stainless steel feature across the gridded facades, while a bench spans the entire sea-facing elevation to offer spaces for rest. Where the exterior walls are not glazed, panels of white bush-hammered concrete with marble aggregate are used to echo the colours of the surrounding landscape.
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"Simple and clear" service centre draws on roadside buildings in Norway (Original Post)
Celerity
Jul 9
OP
Ocelot II
(119,188 posts)1. How can you tell what it is?
Celerity
(46,154 posts)2. A sign, plus there was something similar there before.
It replaces old and dilapidated facilities on the site, which is positioned beside a white sandy beach and bordered by the large mountain ranges of Flakstadøy.
Ocelot II
(119,188 posts)3. It reminds me of some of the bus shelters around here.
They're pretty plain but you know they're bus shelters because there's a bus stop sign in front of them. I suppose the locals know what they're for already. Nice place to sit and look at the scenery.
Ocelot II
(119,188 posts)4. It surprised me to learn that surfing is a thing in the Lofoten archipelago.
But I saw a TV series, "Twin," on Netflix about a ne'er-do-well surfer who is the twin of his upstanding brother who runs a resort there that caters to surfers. Who knew? https://www.nrk.no/presse/_twin_-kommer-til-hosten-1.14551857