Oase #91
Oase #91
Oase #91
landscape. What intuition revealed to us, through these images, was an emphasis on
material, texture and tactility, as well as on light, shadow and aging, or to put it
differently, the images showed experiences, evoking sensory perceptions, and
stirring the mind. Our personal research, investigating how atmosphere is inextricably
linked with spatial experience and architectural quality, resulted in the booklet
Stepping Stones from which a selection of images is included in this editorial. The
booklet was the starting point of our conversations with the two leading voices in this
issue of OASE: Juhani Pallasmaa and Peter Zumthor.
Both Peter Zumthor and Juhani Pallasmaa have identified atmosphere as a core
theme of architecture. Finnish architect Juhani Pallasmaa argues that the experience
of atmosphere can be related to the concept of spatial quality: The quality of a space
or place is not merely a visual perceptual quality as is usually assumed. The
judgement of environmental character is a complex multi-sensory fusion of countless
factors, which are immediately and synthetically grasped as an overall atmosphere,
feeling, mood or ambiance.5 Atmosphere is an essential concept for Swiss architect
Peter Zumthor as well. In his text Atmospheres (1996) Zumthor identified a series of
themes that play a role in his work in achieving architectonic atmosphere, including
material compatibility, the temperature of a space, levels of intimacy and
architecture as environment.6 The two architects address atmosphere in different
ways: while Pallasmaa reflects on the relation of atmosphere with other crucial
aspects of architectural experience in a theoretical sense, Zumthor directly uses
atmosphere as a guiding principle in his architectural practice. For this issue, OASE
invited Peter Zumthor and Juhani Pallasmaa to engage in a conversation about
building atmosphere.
With Juhani Pallasmaa, who we visited in his office in Helsinki around midsummer
2013, we discussed how atmospheres are constructed in, for instance, painting,
literature and music, adjoining professional fields that, according to him, reveal much
of the essences of the field of architecture. Concerning the role of the architect,
Pallasmaa identified a need for a certain balance between naivety and expertise to
develop a sensibility for atmospheres which may very well be, as he stated during
the interview, our sixth sense. In any case, Pallasmaa argued, atmosphere is
immediately experienced as a unity, in which all senses are simultaneously at work.
The experience of atmospheric quality in architecture, then, is by definition an
embodied experience. However, since architecture is subject to use, atmosphere is
by no means a merely individual task. Pallasmaa noted, moreover, that it is crucial for
architects to empathise with users, clients and other perceivers of architecture, no
matter how anonymous or distant they may seem. He thus considered, next to
embodiment, compassion as a necessary skill for architects to be able to build
atmosphere. In addition to this interview, Pallasmaa shares his experience of Frank
Lloyd Wrights Taliesin West studios in Arizona, where he resided for some months in
2012-2013. He reflects on the atmospheric qualities of the work of Frank Lloyd
Wright, using the word orchestration to emphasise his intuitive manner of integration
through similarity and contrast into a unified, but dynamic unity, as in musical
counterpoint.
In the winter of 2013, we visited Zumthor in his atelier in the Swiss mountain village
Haldenstein. During a day at his office we witnessed the modus operandi of the
atelier, literally following Zumthor in his daily practice, joining him on a tour through
the office, and took part in numerous small project discussions with Zumthor and his
team around models and drawings. The transcription of this visit, published in this
OASE, describes how themes such as landscape, character, materiality and reality
guide the building of atmosphere in his projects. It becomes clear that these themes
are not conceptually approached and discussed: rather, they are embedded in the
way of making. Models play a prominent role in this making. While the visit to
Haldenstein is portrayed in an anecdotic mode, offering the reader a close, almost
participatory view of the way atmospheres are built in the Zumthor office, in an
added article written by Mathieu Berteloot and Vronique Patteeuw OASE also
presents a theoretical investigation that distinguishes a number of guiding principles
in Zumthors work though the use of models.
While the conversations with Zumthor and Pallasmaa form the guidelines of the
issue, presenting both a reflective (Pallasmaa) and an operational (Zumthor)
architectural view, this issue also delves further, in a theoretical sense, into the
definition of atmosphere as a dynamic interaction among objective architectonic
aspects and their subjective perception. To achieve this OASE introduces the
German philosopher Gernot Bhme as a third voice in the conversation.
Bhme, in the aforementioned issue of Daidalos, argued that atmosphere may
be a conjunction of personal and emotional impressions of space, but this
conjunction is reproduced by the objective assembly of materials, spatial proportions,
the aging of the materials, the connections of the materials and the connections to
the place or other buildings, rhythms, light, etcetera. Atmospheres, Bhme continues,
are characteristic manifestations of the co-presence of subject and object. 7 The way
we experience atmosphere is determined by many aspects, and as such scarcely
definable, but what can be concluded is that atmosphere is first and foremost a total
experience, not a mere accumulation of constituent aspects. To give room in this
issue for an in-depth theoretical reflection on atmosphere, the volume includes a text
from Gernot Bhmes seminal book Architektur und Atmosphre. As a primer for the
interviews with Pallasmaa and Zumthor, this essay forms the theoretical opening of
the issue, constructing a foundation on the basis of which a definition of atmosphere
as a dynamic interaction among objective architectonic aspects and their subjective
perception can be drawn. Further, and following the contributions by Zumthor and
Pallasmaa, Bhme reflects on the notion of atmosphere in the work of both
protagonists in a separate article, especially written for OASE.
After these intuitive, theoretical and reflective investigations, this issue once more
returns to the operational potential of the concept of atmosphere, urging the question
of design, as in the quote of Zumthor above: How can I get it into my own work?
We wondered how the interest in such an elusive concept as atmosphere relates
to the concrete practice of building: How does the search for atmosphere work within
the design process in relation to the notions of material, craft and detail? More
specifically: Is it actually possible to build atmosphere? Therefore this OASE features
a number of architectural projects: a church in Helsinki and one in Berlin, a social
housing block in Amsterdam, and a public space in Ghent. These projects, that were
chosen because of a specific materiality or program, are investigated and presented
through two perspectives: an artist provides a reflection upon the spatial experience,
while an architect rethinks the theme of atmosphere and design through this very
project.
Where Pallasmaa uses the word orchestration when discussing the intuitive