[Un]finished is the story of a project about a bunker landscape, part of the Atlantic wall
(1942). On such a contested site, the bunker complex Rijksdorp near The Hague, tensions
between opposing forces are put on display. Is it a nature reserve only? Is it cultural
heritage? Is it war architecture?
As a memorial, this landscape wants to offer an experience of sensing the relationship
between lightness and horror, chaos and order. As a meditative “journey of awareness”
in a memory…
[Un]finished is the story of a project about a bunker landscape, part of the Atlantic wall
(1942). On such a contested site, the bunker complex Rijksdorp near The Hague, tensions
between opposing forces are put on display. Is it a nature reserve only? Is it cultural
heritage? Is it war architecture?
As a memorial, this landscape wants to offer an experience of sensing the relationship
between lightness and horror, chaos and order. As a meditative “journey of awareness”
in a memory landscape. Themes of time, light and dark, pain and death, are evoked
and experienced. Coherence is achieved by accentuating a new center in the complex
devoted to a new ritual of disposing human and non-human bodies. As artistic expression,
this ritual about the transient nature of physical bodies marks itself as the transformative
heart of the site.
This challenge is a timely one. The war ruins of the Atlantikwall need more attention than
they have received until now. As a complex heritage they represent spaces of anxiety, and
trauma. Yet, they are often denied full understanding of this meaning as we are not able,
nor willing to look trauma into its eyes. The central questions then are: how may these
objects be brought to speak? How may the past serve the now?
Should we not aim to activate personal engagement, instead of showing history as a
passive image? How to reveal the vital, living character of such places that transcends
their history? Such negated sites present ‘intervals of possibility’, a ‘healing memorial’.
The starting point is the belief that architecture may come into being out of its own specific
place in the same way nature creates its own habitat from its own internal growth. Another
one is the urgency for concrete stories about the co-existence of architecture, history,
humans, animals, plants, and insects. Healing means: architecture, place, and stories are
intimately connected, helping to understand and accept the cycle of life.
No new architecture was needed, as everything was already there. The main approach
is to deal with the site as a three-layered composition that consists of landscape,
architecture, and program. Tools used are: Removing, drilling holes in both the bunkers
and the landscape. Replacing, often material removed will be reused. Connecting, walks
will link the different parts as a narrative together. The different bunkers and their inner
rooms will find a connection with each other and the landscape. Minimal adding, this will
enhance the role of the architectonic object.
The project concentrates on creating a coherent whole, where the visitor may follow a
narrative or easily create his own. The project intends to bring different rituals under one
roof, such as artistic, mournful, festive, and educational events.
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