#
Date
Title
Source
Description
Tags
W3634
14.05.2011
Centre Pompidou Mobile - Berger&Berger
WWW
Centre Pompidou Mobile

 Berger&Berger (Laurent P. Berger & Cyrille Berger) with T. Raynaud

 2009 Restricted competition

 1800 m²

Mobile art museum 

CNAC GEORGES-POMPIDOU, France

 Structural Engineer : Bollinger + Gro ...

Centre Pompidou Mobile

 Berger&Berger (Laurent P. Berger & Cyrille Berger) with T. Raynaud

 2009 Restricted competition

 1800 m²

Mobile art museum 

CNAC GEORGES-POMPIDOU, France

 Structural Engineer : Bollinger + Grohmann (France)
 Mechanical Engineer : Alto Ingénierie (France)


The grid as a source of variability.
In using the grid the idea was not simply to optimize the schematic composition
in an economy of space, but rather to affirm its validity and continuity regardless
of program and function.
The grid here is not necessarily constructive, but a formal expression of spatial
extension. The Centre Pompidou Mobile project is a shifting structure, without
center, hierarchy, or periphery. Its boundaries are those defined by the program.
Our project is an abstract space, neutral and free of iconographic connotation.
It is a geometric space that does not attempt to create an anecdotal or figurative
relation to the landscape.
Instead it is a space that seeks to build on the physical, seasonal and climatic
qualities of the different locations where it will be installed.
An abstract architecture where space is defined as an availability of uses.
The rationalization and economy of space assigns the architectural project
to a minimum form. If the grid is more significant than ever in Superstudio's
projects, it now becomes the tool of a widespread displacement.
An "indifferent architecture", it guarantees changing environments of varying
quality.
The grid not only accepts but is enriched by any logic of exhibits and stage sets.
Ironically it rejects any notion of uniform space and deviates from the temptation
of the figurative or symbolic. This produces a new museum landscape. An "a-figurative" structure that becomes
a locus for the production of a variety of scenarios generated by an infinity
of moods.
It is an "a-representative" architecture that does not seek to be a sign but which
could ultimately become one. It is a space that can dissolve the natural, artificial,
form and function into an ever-changing environment. This will permit multiple
uses and varying scenic interpretations to emerge. The project develops an
architecture beyond any formalism or subjective expression.
It is an architectural style which allows for the articulation of spaces that are
identical in surface (6x6m) but qualitatively unique (light, volume, temperature ...).
If for the architect Peter Eisenman the grid was a way to enhance the spatial
configurations in the most effective way with regards to a given program,
here the grid does not serve only to optimize functional spaces. It also creates
breaks, voids, a-functional spaces, pathways and unexpected scenes :
unpredictable uses for the mobile museum.
This project provides for an infinite number of spatial qualities, without prejudicing
their programmatic value. It is the setting in abyss of the museum :
there are as many museums as cubes. The mobile museum is no longer a simple
museum but a collection of museums. The loss of any reference to the external
or vanishing point paradoxically leads to an indeterminacy of museum program
and territory, supported by a stretch that is open to the fluctuating local climate.
What matters here is the search for variability and not the quest to the modularity.
This is an architecture designed as the architecture of relationships, free of any
distance or authority of representation.
The grid becomes achieves a new status : it is the tool of a qualitative expansion,
tool of decomposition and reconstruction.

Centre Pompidou Mobile

 Berger&Berger (Laurent P. Berger & Cyrille Berger) with T. Raynaud

 2009 Restricted competition

 1800 m²

Mobile art museum 

CNAC GEORGES-POMPIDOU, France

 Structural Engineer : Bollinger + Gro ...

Centre Pompidou Mobile

 Berger&Berger (Laurent P. Berger & Cyrille Berger) with T. Raynaud

 2009 Restricted competition

 1800 m²

Mobile art museum 

CNAC GEORGES-POMPIDOU, France

 Structural Engineer : Bollinger + Grohmann (France)
 Mechanical Engineer : Alto Ingénierie (France)


The grid as a source of variability.
In using the grid the idea was not simply to optimize the schematic composition
in an economy of space, but rather to affirm its validity and continuity regardless
of program and function.
The grid here is not necessarily constructive, but a formal expression of spatial
extension. The Centre Pompidou Mobile project is a shifting structure, without
center, hierarchy, or periphery. Its boundaries are those defined by the program.
Our project is an abstract space, neutral and free of iconographic connotation.
It is a geometric space that does not attempt to create an anecdotal or figurative
relation to the landscape.
Instead it is a space that seeks to build on the physical, seasonal and climatic
qualities of the different locations where it will be installed.
An abstract architecture where space is defined as an availability of uses.
The rationalization and economy of space assigns the architectural project
to a minimum form. If the grid is more significant than ever in Superstudio's
projects, it now becomes the tool of a widespread displacement.
An "indifferent architecture", it guarantees changing environments of varying
quality.
The grid not only accepts but is enriched by any logic of exhibits and stage sets.
Ironically it rejects any notion of uniform space and deviates from the temptation
of the figurative or symbolic. This produces a new museum landscape. An "a-figurative" structure that becomes
a locus for the production of a variety of scenarios generated by an infinity
of moods.
It is an "a-representative" architecture that does not seek to be a sign but which
could ultimately become one. It is a space that can dissolve the natural, artificial,
form and function into an ever-changing environment. This will permit multiple
uses and varying scenic interpretations to emerge. The project develops an
architecture beyond any formalism or subjective expression.
It is an architectural style which allows for the articulation of spaces that are
identical in surface (6x6m) but qualitatively unique (light, volume, temperature ...).
If for the architect Peter Eisenman the grid was a way to enhance the spatial
configurations in the most effective way with regards to a given program,
here the grid does not serve only to optimize functional spaces. It also creates
breaks, voids, a-functional spaces, pathways and unexpected scenes :
unpredictable uses for the mobile museum.
This project provides for an infinite number of spatial qualities, without prejudicing
their programmatic value. It is the setting in abyss of the museum :
there are as many museums as cubes. The mobile museum is no longer a simple
museum but a collection of museums. The loss of any reference to the external
or vanishing point paradoxically leads to an indeterminacy of museum program
and territory, supported by a stretch that is open to the fluctuating local climate.
What matters here is the search for variability and not the quest to the modularity.
This is an architecture designed as the architecture of relationships, free of any
distance or authority of representation.
The grid becomes achieves a new status : it is the tool of a qualitative expansion,
tool of decomposition and reconstruction.