Evolucio / Onionlab

Projected onto the façade of the Musées d’art et d’histoire de Genève, Onionlab‘s ‘Evolucio’ is a piece that revolves around the graphic and sound abstraction of the concept it is named after: evolution. Created with 3D projection mapping techniques, It is construed as transformation, construction and alteration of reality through time; evolution as a discontinuous creation process as well. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Taking the evolution concept even further, Evolucio was conceived as an open transformation process so that it can also be adapted to different façades and projection surfaces, and so that it can continue its transformation process. Available for further projections, it can be adapted to various physical formats, e.g. indoor structures, or different façades.

Design and Production: Onionlab
Location: Geneva, Switzerland
Organized by: Mapping Festival and Les Musées d’art et d’histoire de la Ville de Genève
3D Artists / 2D Composing / Coding: Carles Munné, Mike van der Noordt, Pepe Vega, Natalia Reyes, Directed by: Aleix Fernández
Producer: Joel Mestre
Music and Sound Design: Leiko
Evolució Technical Direction: Jordi Pont
Mapping Festival Technical Direction: Adrien Boulanger
Technical Implementation: Lumens 8
Thanks to: Bordos (Bordos Artwork), Ana Ascensio (Mapping Festival), Linda Cavaliero and Co., Gregor (Sound engineering), David (Art and History Museum)

Click here to view the embedded video.

Evolucio / Onionlab Courtesy of Onionlab
Evolucio / Onionlab Courtesy of Onionlab
Evolucio / Onionlab Courtesy of Onionlab
Evolucio / Onionlab Courtesy of Onionlab
Evolucio / Onionlab Courtesy of Onionlab

Evolucio / Onionlab originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 18 May 2013.

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Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes

Architects: Clavienrossier Architectes
Location: Geneva, Switzerland
Year: 2012
Photographs: Roger Frei

The site is located on the edge of a residen- tial zone on the outskirts of Geneva, flanked on its southern border by a forest and opening out to fields to the west. It sits right on the line between the city and nature.

The building, backed by a paved access ramp, is placed in the north east corner of the site. The space between the building and the forest allows for a swimming pool and a large open garden.

The program includes two apartments of differing size, a continuous party wall sepa- rates the two.

A pitched roof over a diamond shaped plan, allows each apartment to have its own orien- tation. This distinct geometry allows for a greater degree of privacy for the residents and when viewed from the outside, gives the impression of a single unit.

The split geometry of the facades makes it difficult to get a grasp of the real size of the building, giving each individual facade a more domestic scale.

The exterior envelope of the building is entirely composed of integrally-coloured concrete, including the roof. Loggias built out of larch, perforate the facade and the roof of the building.The building conforms to very high energy standards.

Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes © Roger Frei
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes Plans
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes Elevations
Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes Elevation + Section

Two in One House / Clavienrossier Architectes originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 17 May 2013.

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Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes

The proposal for the Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique by Mauro Turin Architectes takes into account the cultural significance of the historical national monument and uses century-old construction along with various updated methodologies. Their aspiration is to add, in a notion of continuity, a new layer of history about the site and the Castle. Therefore, the building is designed in the image of its ambitions, in the expectation in what can be called the expansion of the Castle. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The castle of Chillon (1150), become mythical thanks to Lord Byron poem ‘The prisoner of Chillon’. The project is an enlarged design in the sense of its own mind. In the understanding of the notion of fortress and protected area; but even from the understanding of its conception from closed areas around open patios.

The closed spaces found their place under the historic road and are developed in the way to be, in the meantime, places of activity and passageways, some connectors between the garden downstairs and the historic road upstairs. At the bottom, they open straight to the historical garden and to the lake. A first space of restaurant activity suggested in direct relationship to them, allows that garden find out a new meaning of life and a dynamic, non-existent actually.

At the top, they are seeking for the extension with the historic road. The proposed relation with this access, with its staircase and its sloping lawn followed by closed spaces characterized from the shop and the second space of catering sector, is an invitation to the discovery to the strollers. The second space of the restaurant activity tries to crowning the willing to produce, with our proposal, a phenomenological experience connected to the space and the time.

Stripping the retaining wall of the historic road, the spatial-temporal experience of the Restaurant & Boutiquethat we offer – magnified by this ancient wall revealed and pierced, that opens to the gap and closed to the walls of the Castle – is indispensable to the time-space experience of the Castle itself. Bolstered by this, we aspire to link inseparably our building to the Castle and therefore to the historic site.

Architects: Mauro Turin Architectes
Location: Château de Chillon, Lake Geneva, Veytaux, Switzerland
Competition Result: Mention/5th place
Year: 2013

Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes

Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 May 2013.

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Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes

The proposal for the Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique by Mauro Turin Architectes takes into account the cultural significance of the historical national monument and uses century-old construction along with various updated methodologies. Their aspiration is to add, in a notion of continuity, a new layer of history about the site and the Castle. Therefore, the building is designed in the image of its ambitions, in the expectation in what can be called the expansion of the Castle. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The castle of Chillon (1150), become mythical thanks to Lord Byron poem ‘The prisoner of Chillon’. The project is an enlarged design in the sense of its own mind. In the understanding of the notion of fortress and protected area; but even from the understanding of its conception from closed areas around open patios.

The closed spaces found their place under the historic road and are developed in the way to be, in the meantime, places of activity and passageways, some connectors between the garden downstairs and the historic road upstairs. At the bottom, they open straight to the historical garden and to the lake. A first space of restaurant activity suggested in direct relationship to them, allows that garden find out a new meaning of life and a dynamic, non-existent actually.

At the top, they are seeking for the extension with the historic road. The proposed relation with this access, with its staircase and its sloping lawn followed by closed spaces characterized from the shop and the second space of catering sector, is an invitation to the discovery to the strollers. The second space of the restaurant activity tries to crowning the willing to produce, with our proposal, a phenomenological experience connected to the space and the time.

Stripping the retaining wall of the historic road, the spatial-temporal experience of the Restaurant & Boutiquethat we offer – magnified by this ancient wall revealed and pierced, that opens to the gap and closed to the walls of the Castle – is indispensable to the time-space experience of the Castle itself. Bolstered by this, we aspire to link inseparably our building to the Castle and therefore to the historic site.

Architects: Mauro Turin Architectes
Location: Château de Chillon, Lake Geneva, Veytaux, Switzerland
Competition Result: Mention/5th place
Year: 2013

Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes

Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 May 2013.

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Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes

The proposal for the Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique by Mauro Turin Architectes takes into account the cultural significance of the historical national monument and uses century-old construction along with various updated methodologies. Their aspiration is to add, in a notion of continuity, a new layer of history about the site and the Castle. Therefore, the building is designed in the image of its ambitions, in the expectation in what can be called the expansion of the Castle. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The castle of Chillon (1150), become mythical thanks to Lord Byron poem ‘The prisoner of Chillon’. The project is an enlarged design in the sense of its own mind. In the understanding of the notion of fortress and protected area; but even from the understanding of its conception from closed areas around open patios.

The closed spaces found their place under the historic road and are developed in the way to be, in the meantime, places of activity and passageways, some connectors between the garden downstairs and the historic road upstairs. At the bottom, they open straight to the historical garden and to the lake. A first space of restaurant activity suggested in direct relationship to them, allows that garden find out a new meaning of life and a dynamic, non-existent actually.

At the top, they are seeking for the extension with the historic road. The proposed relation with this access, with its staircase and its sloping lawn followed by closed spaces characterized from the shop and the second space of catering sector, is an invitation to the discovery to the strollers. The second space of the restaurant activity tries to crowning the willing to produce, with our proposal, a phenomenological experience connected to the space and the time.

Stripping the retaining wall of the historic road, the spatial-temporal experience of the Restaurant & Boutiquethat we offer – magnified by this ancient wall revealed and pierced, that opens to the gap and closed to the walls of the Castle – is indispensable to the time-space experience of the Castle itself. Bolstered by this, we aspire to link inseparably our building to the Castle and therefore to the historic site.

Architects: Mauro Turin Architectes
Location: Château de Chillon, Lake Geneva, Veytaux, Switzerland
Competition Result: Mention/5th place
Year: 2013

Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes
Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes Courtesy of Mauro Turin Architectes

Château of Chillon Restaurant & Boutique Competition Entry / Mauro Turin Architectes originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 15 May 2013.

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Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes

Architects: meier + associés architectes
Location: Saint-Maurice, Valais, Switzerland
Collaborators: Joana Pimenta, Amalia Jimenez, Victor Ferreira, Ludovic Durand, Cathie Martinie, Nicolas Pailler, Michael Schaub, Linda Serra, Jean-Philippe Tournigand-Demilly
Area: 3,115 sqm
Year: 2012
Photographs: Y André

Work Supervision: Architech SA
Civil Engineering: Conus & Bignens SA
M&E And Sanitary Engineering: GDClimat SA
Electrical Engineering: Emeltec SA
Surveyor: G Rey-Bellet SA
Artist: R Buser

Located off the A9 motorway at the Saint-Maurice exit, the competence centre for light to heavy vehicles hosts a diversified program. A control centre for heavy vehicles circulating on the Valais motorway network, and a vehicle storage area in case of bad weather on the mountain passes. Further to the activity, have been added a hall for vehicles periodic inspection from both categories running in the lower Valais, and a regional Police station.

The architectural bias proposed face a complex program, is a primarily a “ground project.” Responding to the constraint of a compound circulation linked to the site various activities: a plate of bitumen clearly defines the artificial nature of the intervention within the landscape. Its shape is dictated by both the territorial boundaries and the function.

This exchange platform fits smoothly into the topography, revealing its landscape by some “folds.” At his heart, several “flowers” echo the elements of nature, while substituing the role of the surface water soakaways.


On this mineral plate, the building gently alights as a metal and glass “petal” , topped with a thin vegetal overlay. The roof is expressed as a torn piece of natural soil rising above the new artificial ground. From the motorway, this reconstituted nature signs the new institution.

Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes © Y André
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Site Plan
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Basement Floor Plan
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Lower Floor Plan
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Upper Floor Plan
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Roof Plan
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Elevations
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Elevations
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Section
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Section
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Section
Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes Model

Motorway Control Centre / meier + associés architectes originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 30 Apr 2013.

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Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez

Located in a strategic point in Heiden, where different urban conditions come together, the Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden proposal is shaped by the surrounding landscape. The landscape continuity crossing the plot area, the particular building density, and its relevant position from the main entrance to the city are all used to achieve a perfect urban integration. Designed by Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez, this strategy enhances the environmental qualities, while staying within the strict respect of urban regulations. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The building is composed of two volumes: the main building is a five-story compact volume, perfectly integrated in the surrounding urban fabric, with a minimal footprint in the plot area. The second volume is a low elevated cylinder for the conference room. The intersection of both volumes signs the main entrance door and articulates the connec­tion inside/outside, by creating an exterior covered space for drop-off area.

A single central core provides vertical circulations in the building, with a closed stair and 2 panoramic eleva­tors. A central corridor deserves the rooms, and the public spaces in the ground floor level. The public programs are organized in the first level, a 6,5m double-height space for the reception, lobby area, bar and breakfast room. Meeting rooms and offices are organized in a mezzanine level, along a corridor also connecting to the conference room. Above, there are the upper room levels. A simple layout repeats to make clear technical installations and structure. There are 10 standard rooms and 3 high-standard rooms at each floor.

The elevation is also divided in 2 parts in order to divide main uses: the elevation for the public program in the Ground Floor and 1st levels is a curtain wall with thick vertical wooden mullions, with natural ventilation inlet integrated. The transparent elevation is combined with an opaque façade for the technical logistic spaces, inspired of typical elevation textures in the area, with diagonal beams clad in wood, and small glass openings between. Wood and glass provide continuity to the predominant vegetal landscape around and ensure a big transparency for public spaces of the building.

Regarding the rooms levels, a skin of small vertical louvers frames the windows of the rooms, creating a dyna­mic vibration to the elevation through the light-and-shadow effect under the daylight. These small louvers have 2 different materials according to the orientation: To the south, louvers are made of white resin board, esta­blishing a close dialogue with the modern architecture language of the Kursaal, and surrounding buildings.

That dialogue is reinforced by the pure and modern elevated cylinder. For the north part, oriented towards the big landscape and towards the lake, the louvers will be clad in copper, close to the natural green tones of the vegetation around. The same elevation system is adapting for both conditions. Finally, the solar panels on the roof are considered as a part of the building design. The vertical skin tilts down to create the inclined surface of the solar panel, giving a colorful and geometrical continuity.

The landscape design is entirely guided by a single purpose: to extend as much as possible the influence of Kurpark. Different spaces of the village (Kurpark, Durant Platz) are connected in order to reduce the barriers that sepa­rate them.

The surroundings of the new hotel are designed as an extension of the park. Existing trees are preserved and new species of plantations are derived from the plant palette already presented. The car roads along the Seeallee are slowed down by the complexity of the plot. The parking places of the project are disposed between the planted areas along the road.

Architects: Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez
Location: Heiden, Switzerland
Team: Toshihiro Kubota, Yves Bachmann, Francisco Martinez
Landscape Architect: Bassinet Turquin Paysage
Energy and Building Technology: Amstein-Walthert
Perspectives: Jigen
Client: Heiden City
Type of Competition: Open Competition
Program: Hotel 3 stars (50 rooms), seminer room, restaurant, parking, landscape design
Site Area: Study Area – 15.05 ha; Construction Area – 1,525m²
Building Area: 551m²
Building Surface: Usable Floor Area – 2,066 m²; Gross Floor Area – 2,295m²
Building Height: 21.5m
Total Construction Budget: 17 million euros
Competition Date: December 2012

Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez Courtesy of Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez Courtesy of Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez Courtesy of Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez Courtesy of Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez Courtesy of Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez masterplan
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez plan 01
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez plan 02
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez plan 03
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez plan 04
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez north elevation
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez south elevation
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez section 01
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez section 02
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez section 03
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez detail 01
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez detail 02
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez entrance diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez green space diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez axonometric diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez grid structure diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez panoramic view diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez program diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez setback diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez solar panels diagram
Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez south square diagram

Hotel Park and Seeallee Heiden Competition Entry / Kubota & Bachmann Architects + Martinez originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 29 Apr 2013.

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‘Superpose’ School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE

With the intention of restructuring the school complex in the city of Sion, the starting point for OVERCODE was to conceive a compact building deploying a strategy of economy of means and space. Consisting of a school extension, new nursery and new gymnasium, their urban strategy spins around the idea of closing and opening the site at the same time. More images and architects’ description after the break.

We propose a building that acts as a permeable border. It separates and unites the school’s court-yard with the different activities around (new multi-event space, street, existing school and court-yard). The new school extension therefore closes the existing block (ilot des Collines) and opens up at the court-yard level in order to reveal it as a new fundamental element of the neighborhood. 

The new building takes advantage of the existing different levels by floating its mass in order to create the preau (covered court-yard) in continuity with the school’s existing court-yard. This new open and generous space accentuates the character of the place by gathering a spatial continuity of the public surface at the urban scale thus becoming a dynamic urban element.

We propose to create an urban element with its own identity contributing to the heterogeneity of the school complex by stacking all the programs into one envelope, thus achieving compactness. On this way the new activities are placed following the logic of accessibility and continuity: the baby nursery is placed on the ground floor with its own private court-yard, the preau follows the level of the existing court-yard level, the kids nursery is placed on the first floor with a direct access from the street level, the gym for gymnastic practice is placed on the second level in order to offer a degree of intimacy and views over the mountains, and finally the extra classrooms on the last level of the building.

Landscape Strategy

We deploy a clear and efficient public space strategy promoting slow speed movement:

-Unity: the same floor covering was used in order to connect and unite the school complex exterior spaces.
-Re-use: clustering hang-out spaces around existing tree structures.
-Continuity: stairs and ramps guarantee smooth transitions from the different levels. 

Moreover, by positioning the building at the south end of the site we created clear exterior places with different qualities: the Matze square at the front of the site, the nursery’s court-yard, the cover school’s court-yard (preau), the school’s court-yard, and the new north-west square next to the old school building (city monument).The demolition of the existing gym provided the opportunity to enhance the monumentality of the old school building, and create a new connection with the north of the neighborhood. So, in order to articulate this passage we place the new guardian dwelling at the very corner of this new square. 

Architects: OVERCODE architecture urbanisme
Location: Sion, Switzerland
Architects in Charge: Alejandro Garcia Marta, Claire Garcia Barriet
Program: School extension, new nursery, and a new gym for gymnastic practice
Status: Competition Entry
Year: 2013

'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE Courtesy of OVERCODE
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE Courtesy of OVERCODE
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE Courtesy of OVERCODE
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE site plan
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE ground floor plan
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE plan 01
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE plan 02
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE plan 03
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE plan 04
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE east elevation
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE north elevation
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE west elevation
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE south elevation
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE section 01
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE section 02
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE program diagram
'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE axonometric diagram

'Superpose' School Extension Competition Entry / OVERCODE originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 25 Apr 2013.

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