Issue 4
Jun 2019
IE:Studio
— Introduction
Francesca Murialdo and Naomi House
04 The concealed and revealed
interiors of Google Street view
Carmel Keren
11 Unveiling. Identity and interiors.
Marta Averna
16 In a Darkened Room: reflecting
on the negated interior
Nigel Simpkins
22 Atlantic Wall bunkers possible
Re-use. Strategies for the
re-appropriation of a forgotten
heritage.
Gennaro Postiglione and Francesco
Lenzini
28 Concealed interiors for
production in the Age of
Industry 4.0
Silvia Piardi, Francesco Scullica,
Michele Ottomanelli and Elena Elgani
33 Members Only - The private life of
the gay and bi-sexual, male sauna
Michael Westthorp
38 The Juniper Tree
Thomas Kendall
50 Lost Interiors: An investigation
of the Keskidee Centre
Charlotte Anthony
56 Open Neighbourhoods.
Disclosing the hidden
potentialities of urban interiors
Chiara Lecce
64 Between the digital and the
physical: SENSITIVE_SCAPE
Giovanna Piccinno
70 Affective reasoning:
hidden interiors
Rebecca Disney and
Simon Lanyon-Hogg
— Back Cover
The
Hidden
Interior
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Issue 4
The Hidden Interior
22
Atlantic Wall bunkers possible Re-use. Strategies for
the re-appropriation of a forgotten heritage.
#concealed STUDIO
Gennaro Postiglione & Francesco Lenzini
Gennaro Postiglione: is Full Professor in Architecture of Interiors and Head of MSc in Architecture
Architecture-Built Environment-Interiors at Politecnico di Milano,
[email protected]
Francesco Lenzini: is PhD in Interior and Exhibition Design and Adjunct Professor in Architecture of
Interiors at Politecnico di Milano.
[email protected]
Abstract
The Design Studio has developed a project aimed at enhancing the remains of the
Atlantic Wall, fostering the recovery of several artefacts completely forgotten and
hidden from the everyday gaze, in order to promote Le Grand Tour de l’Atlantique:
an equipped path, similar to the great alpine tracks, where simple bivouacs allow
the division of the crossing into stages, acting as “points of support” (Stützpunkt).
This is a journey in the places of the Great War, in memory of those events, along
an extraordinary coastline rich with countless elements of cultural and natural value,
but also in contact with monumental ruins full of history. The project explores ways
of re-appropriating both these hidden interiors and their monumental landscapes.
The Atlantic Wall (AW) is a fortified Atlantic coastal infrastructure erected by the
Nazis during World War Two, in order to protect the Atlantic coastline stretching
from the Pyrenees to North Cape from the much-feared Allied landings. This
immense defensive line was supposed to be composed of 15,000 buildings (of which
only around 12,000 were actually built) set out strategically along nearly 6,000 km,
with an average inland penetration of several kilometres. Despite these stunning
figures, as well as the remarkable amount of buildings still standing and the dramatic
related memories, the AW has been largely disregarded or at least underestimated as
to its potential to narrate the events that brought it into being. This is proven by the
overall state of abandonment in which most of its structures stand: the progressive
decay of an uncomfortable heritage. A system of spaces and objects removed from
the everyday gaze due to their dramatic past.
The AW educational experience was viewed as an important piece of a larger puzzle
aimed at the re-appropriation of special hidden interiors completely removed from
collective memory for their highly problematic heritage: finding a way to voice
their material and immaterial value. In fact, the theme was chosen with the aim to
give a new semantic dimension to objects – bunkers and other military buildings –
generally forgotten or deliberately excluded from everyday life, setting them within
a broad unifying framework. Therefore, the objective of the course was to explore
possible processes for the re-appropriation of the AW’s artefacts, considering the
infrastructure as the largest European transnational shared memory, a possible tool
for enhancing inclusive dynamics instead of conflictual ones[1] typically connoting
these interiors [Figure1].
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Figure 1: ‘AW survey © AWLM2005. The detailed survey of a specific Stützpunkt located in the North of
Denmark shows the relation between each bunker and their surroundings: at the same time their hidden interiors
were tightly connected with their contexts but at the same time their position in territory was only determined
by their defensive role, without any respect or integration with the landscape. Atopic architecture vs integrated
landscape infrastructure, this is one of the paradoxes AW bunkers.
The operational field of the course was developed through strong trans-scalar research,
connecting the specific elements and artefacts to a broader and more general scheme.
Students were first of all asked to conduct a wide-ranging study aimed at acquiring
knowledge on the AW’s systemic and structural value, as well as on its peculiar relationship
with the natural environment and, most of all, its powerful and frightening hidden interiors.
In fact, bunkers and their rooms meld into the Atlantic coastal landscape in a relationship
nowadays defined as symbiotic, despite its violent and overbearing genesis. Scattered along
the coast - sometimes partially swallowed up by the very land they used to violently occupy the AW bunkers appear as objets trouvés.
This interpretation and mapping were possible owing to the discovery, analysis
and assembly of iconographic and cartographic documents which allowed for the
reconstruction of an archaeological landscape of the conflict, recognising its great
expressive and testimonial potential as well as its aesthetic-landscape value [Figure 1].
A practical step supporting the themed itinerary - which we called Le Grand Tour de
l’Atlantique – was the creation of a large map of the AW, capable of restoring the
meaning and overall readability of its heritage made of places and buildings, history
and memories: putting AW rooms one after another. While mapping the territory,
as a natural integration, students catalogued their interiors according to the functional
typology, trying to grasp, at the same time, the potentially figurative value of their
interiors[2]. The consideration of the formal and material qualities of the buildings –
that somehow transcend the unavoidable testimonial value, bringing them back to the
condition of architecture – triggered the planning phase aimed at their reassessment.
Students were asked to draw up assumptions on how to enhance this cultural
landscape, making the relationship between man, environment and memory
somehow more accessible and understandable, through different interpretations
aimed at bringing back to life their spaces: from defensive rooms totally inaccessible
to welcoming interiors opening up their space to the “foreigner”, to the “other”,
the “unexpected” one. Indeed, the places where the AW bunkers are located have
a spectacular quality. Therefore, we asked the students to investigate this aspect by
highlighting the relationship between their interior spaces and the landscape.
The bunkers, set in this evocative context, were reconsidered as belonging to an
integral narrative process where the direct experience of the artefacts is once again
part of an extended and complex territorial system. Taking into consideration
the bunkers objective - to watch over a specific section of the territory, they were
re-designed as optical cameras capturing the surrounding landscape. The common
starting point was based on the fundamental idea of building new bridges between
people, artefacts, places and history, turning these difficult and hidden interiors
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into a tool for the re-appropriation of the territory and the landscape. Using
this strategy, the students’ proposals began by disrupting the unheimlich quality
of the AW and its wartime identity in favour of new possible horizons. To this
end, Giorgio Agamben’s poetic power was used recalling the following phrase:
‘If to consecrate (sacralise) is the verb that describes things leaving the sphere of
human law, by contrast to profane means to restore them to man’s free use. […]
Deactivating an old use making it inoperative, potentially generates a new use’[3].
The proposals were thus aimed at restoring the AW hidden interiors and their natural
context to the direct experience of nudo luogo (bare place): through minimum linking
interventions and devices capable of connecting them and assigning them a poetic
use, the AW rooms were reconsidered as milestones of a themed itinerary. The system
of paths and small equipped spaces re-connecting the bunkers – in turn reconsidered
as places where it is possible to stop and build relationships – was designed as a means
to re-approach and enter into contact with WWII history in a reconciliatory view:
on the one hand, the path reveals the testamentary scope of the dramatic events
that left their mark on it, and on the other, it attempts to offer itself as a meeting
point for people geographically and culturally distant, where they can enter into
new relationships, radically transforming what was hidden into a manifesto[4]. The
sense of Le Grand Tour de l’Atlantique is based on the attempt to reconsider this painful
heritage as a possible reconciliation between places, events and people through the
observation, reflection and use of a territory studded with material and immaterial
traces. Through the different design proposals, these forgotten interiors are literally
restored to the public gaze, in a physical and symbolic process able of translating
simple practices into vectors of new dwelling models.
On such a basis, the proposal formulated by students Daniela Canzi and Ester
Golia was based on the attempt to rediscover the AW as an architectural artefact
which, beyond its bond with the past, can be recognised by visitors while they regain
its possession. The project methodology progresses in parallel with the strategy
and approach used by the Germans for the construction of the AW: standard and
repeatable buildings positioned in a vast and diversified territory according to precise
requirements provided in the Regelbau. Starting from the AW state of abandonment,
the aim of the project is to bring to light the entire defensive system observing it from
points of view that are different from military logics, especially through unexplored
viewpoints such as the architectural, landscape and aesthetic ones. Therefore, it is
organised on the basis of a three-level standardised hierarchical information system
drawing inspiration from the settlement criteria used by the Germans, with the
aim to restore the AW to its original identity of unitary artefact drawing strength
and meaning from the fact of being a system of correlated junctions and where the
mono-functional hidden rooms play a key role. The first level of the new design is
the national one. Each country is provided with a national historical archive relating
to the AW. The second level of information involves a system of info-centres all
alike in different points of the coastline. The information centres follow a particular
settlement criterion that draws inspiration from an analysis of the quantity of
concrete used in the construction of the AW. The third and last level is mainly local
and is connected to each single interior grafted along the defence line with the task to
provide information in the specific place. Using the AW rooms typology as a design
strategy constitutes the most practical modality for providing information on its
hidden nature against its natural manifested context.
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Figure 2: The roof park © students V. Bormolini, C. Brunelli, M. Parati. To assess the final and toatl
re-appropriation of the monumental and iconic building, the project enhances the artificial landscape of its roof,
already an eco-system of birds and wild grassroots, implementing the presence of water and vegetation and allowing
people accessing the new urban park stepping with their feet on the “head” of the cyclopic and massive U-Boot.
Another relevant work is the project formulated by students Valeria Bormolini,
Claudia Brunelli, Margherita Parati, based on the proposal to renovate the SaintNazaire submarine base in France. The base is one of the 11 U-Boot bunkers built
along the AW whose function was to host the German submarines returning from
their offensive missions in the Atlantic Ocean and allow for their construction and
maintenance. The building is a compact rectangular volume covering more than
38,000 sqm and is made of 480,000 cubic metres of reinforced concrete. The project
is based on two main strategies of intervention, both acting on hidden and completely
dark interiors of this monumental building: the first re-vitalises some of the interiors
with a daily market, recalling values of traditional local markets which are meeting
places, trade thresholds, gathering places; the second provides for the inclusion of
several urban services within some other hidden spaces – an AW exhibition room,
a small library, a cinema – as laid down by local town plans in the immediate area
around the base [Figure 2]. Therefore, the re-appropriation strategy fits into the
existing framework without substantial building modifications, with the exception
of an opening in the roofing needed to bring “to light” those long-time hidden
interiors. At the same time, though, it rewrites the daily use through activities with
strong social connotations historically characterised by the possibility for people to
meet and socialise. In particular, the market –where food plays an important role
as means of intercultural dialogue – maintains a margin of relational spontaneity
and unexpectedness through organisational and execution modalities that avoid
rigid classifications: a total subversion of the enclosed character of this inhospitable
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building and its interiors. Somewhere in-between the desire to remove painful
memories and the fear of losing traces fundamental for the memory of one’s identity,
the grounds of the project allow for mediation. The capacity of the project to become
the interpreter of a forgotten space starts from the very essence of the interior space
to welcome new exchanges between physical environment and human behaviour by
changing the collective perception of the place.
Other interesting proposals were those in which the bunkers forgotten interiors
were simply restored to their original function as landscape point-of-view, without
a full-blown transformation in their use. Gigantic cameras focusing on the horizon,
eternally awaiting the event for which they were built, as in The Longest Day (1962,
movie directed by Ken Annakin, Andrew Marton, Bernhard Wicki, Darryl F. Zanuck).
At the end of the educational experience, the laboratory results were exhibited
in the patio of Politecnico di Milano. Along with the students, we created an
exhibition system based on the reproduction of one bunker interior on a scale 1:1
and a series of images put together in a “panoptic order” capable of generating
a strongly experiential path that recalled the planimetric situation of the Stützpunkt
of Soulac-Sur-Mer, along the French Atlantic southern coastline. To access the
hidden interior, naked of its wall depth reduced to a simple skin, manifested
strongly the wish to neutralise its scary but powerful presence. The choice to
reproduce one room interior trying to respect not only its dimensions but also its
enormous mono-material structure, required great effort rewarded by the immersive
visual experience. Even the circular order of the 360° panorama – positioned
on the basis of the bunkers position in the landscape – was conceived with the
intention to reproduce a privileged spatial dimension and experience in order to
observe the landscape of/from the bunkers with new eyes - the same horizontal view
characterising human perspective and thus re-appropriating the hidden interiors of
the AW exactly with the same gaze that was before excluded [Figure 3].
Figure 3: POLIMI exhibition © G. Postiglione. The re-enactment of a Stützpunkt, between mock-up and
scaled fragments, pictures and drawings, has its clue in the ultimate interior of the bunker cell: inaccessible,
compact, hidden, massive. The act of taking off its volumetry, and unveiling it as a simple and fragile, almost
innocent, room has the power of enhancing its interior and the strong interiority of such a large scale intervention.
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Notes & Citations
1.
William Logan, Keir Reeves, Places of Pain and Shame. Dealing with ‘Difficult Heritage’,
(London/New York: Routledge 2008); Sharon Macdonald, Difficult Heritage.
Negotiating the Nazi Past in Nuremberg and Beyond, (London/New York: Routledge, 2008).
2.
Gennaro Postiglione, AW Bunkers and/as Modern Architecture, in The Atlantikwall
as Military Archeological Landscape, ed. Gennaro Postiglione, Michela Bassanelli,
(Siracusa: Letteraventidue, 2011), 129,144.
3.
Giorgio Agamben, Profanazioni, (Milano: Nottetempo 2005), 83.
4.
John E. Tunbridge, Gregory Ashworth, Dissonant Heritage. The Management of the
Past as a Resource in Conflict, (New York: John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd New 1995).
Bibliography
1.
Agamben, Giorgio. Profanazioni. Milano: Nottetempo, 2005.
2.
Logan, William, Reeves, Keir. Places of Pain and Shame. Dealing with ‘Difficult
Heritage’. London/New York: Routledge 2008.
3.
Macdonald, Sharon. Difficult Heritage. Negotiating the Nazi Past in Nuremberg
and Beyond. London/New York: Routledge 2008.
4.
Postiglione, Gennaro, Bassanelli, Michel, ed. AW Bunkers and/as Modern Architecture,
in The Atlantikwall as Military Archeological Landscape. Siracusa: Letteraventidue, 2011.
5.
Tunbridge, John E., Ashworth, Gregory. Dissonant Heritage. The Management of the
Past as a Resource in Conflict. New York: John Wiley & Sons Australia Ltd New, 1995.