Bureau A
Shelter
Bureau A
26. September 2016
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
SHELTER is a temporary installation designed by BUREAU A for the annual meeting of the Swiss Architectural Association (BSA/FAS). Inspired by the shape of underground shelters, the inflatable structure is a small club with a bar and a dancefloor. The structure and the furniture is entirely made of black PVC membrane. When the party is over, the installation is quickly deflated and transported to the next location.
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
Architecture seeks the underground, searches for new territories under the skin of the earth. Bachelard woke up the right to the unconscious spatial exploration of the underground through the figure of the cellar. Virilio unveiled the potential of semi-buried architectures in his Bunker Archeology. Colomine brought up to light the hidden architectures and psychotic strategies of the American society during the Second World War in her book Domesticity at War.
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
The underground fascinates and completes the hygienic and panoptical world of the over-ground. For one night, the black hole of a neat and well organized society is revealed as a potential for distortion, a potential of let-go and provoke, with a slight smile, the unsaid and the sweat. The mysterious black vessel lands in the modern space of a highly engendered concrete vault; a great spatial condition to explore the corners of what is hidden.
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
The temporary shelter installation is a dark inflatable bar with a DJ. The whole structure as well as the interior furniture is made out of black PVC membrane. When the party is over the installation is deflated and transported to another location.
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
Photo: Dylan Perrenoud
Plan and Elevation (Drawing: Bureau A)
Shelter Survey (Drawing: Bureau A)
PROJECT CREDITS
Client
BSA/FAS (Bund Schweizer Architeckten/Fédération des Architectes Suisses/Federazione Architetti Svizzeri)
Architect
Bureau A
Completion Date
Summer 2016
Photographs
Dylan Perrenoud