|
Almost Nothing
October 15, 2002
This summer Dirk Jan Postel (Kraayvanger-Urbis)
won the Benedictus Award for a small pavilion with a roof supported
entirely by glass.

|
 |
A minor theme that persistently runs through modern architecture
is the quest for (almost) nothing, for the purest possible architecture
whose form is determined by the very absence of all that is superfluous.
The most striking illustration is the development of the glass pavilion,
in which space seems defined by nothing but the roof. In truth,
the 'story' of the glass pavilion has long been told, ever since
Mies van der Rohe's Farnsworth House first set the standard and
Philip Johnson responded to it. All that remained was technology,
as well as the question whether the columns could be dispensed with.
The answer was yes. Glass can, if necessary, be used as a bearing
structure, and glass walls can support a roof. Last year Dirk Jan
Postel - who had already shown an understanding of the bearing capacity
of glass with an entirely glazed bridge connecting two parts of
his own office - constructed a modest pavilion with 'invisible'
walls in France.

|
 |
The small pavilion is situated on the abutment of what used to
be a railway line, beside an 18th-century folly. Glass plates support
the 2000-kilogram, wooden, stressed-skin roof. Laminated hard-glass
plates secured to the ground provide lateral and rotational stability.
Light reflection means that the walls are still visible, but more
'nothingness' would seem impossible - unless of course you devised
a climatological curtain of air in the form of heat currents for
example.
For all that, the question is naturally not who succeeds in building
the most invisible wall, but whether it results in something of
architectural merit. And this pavilion certainly does. At least
that's the verdict of the jury of the Benedictus Award for innovation
in architectural laminated glass, which selected the pavilion for
the 'Grand Award'.
Translation: Billy Nolan
more information:
Kraaijvanger
Urbis
Benedictus
Award
|