PAM Competition 2013 - Lenggong Valley Visitor Centre

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LENGGONG VALLEY VISITOR CENTRE Flexibility and Adaptation : Infrastructural Architecture

Design Strategy

“Uncommitted or free space must be seen not merely as the canvas for a new piece of architecture but as a continuing resource able to be fertilised by the introduction of built structuring which does not in itself and through its very form imply a particular use from the start.” (Cedric Price, 1984) Design Hypothesis

Spatial Arrangement By adopting a grid-based spatial division the structural columns are dispersed in a grid of 8x8m. The spaces are arranged in the way that these spaces will be directly connected to the centralised circulatory system. This means the spaces would appear to be ‘stretching’ away from the centre. A space only takes up as much ‘grid’ as it presently needs.

This scheme indulges strong insistence on the idea of flexibility and adaptability linking it to the notion of “calculated uncertainty.” This term is defined by Cedric Price as “the creation of temporary, adaptable structures that can be altered, transformed or demolished, serving the need of the moment.” (Price,1984)

Lightweight Construction In order to create a ‘light’ structure that perceptibly separated from the ground, the building ‘stretches’ vertically by means of tall and thin steel columns where the intersecting spaces intentionally do not touch the ground.

The new Lenggong Valley Visitor Centre presents itself under an elegant structure of a massive canopy that seemingly floating gracefully on the sloping site held up by thin steel pillars. The canopy is established as a platform where the space underneath would be manipulated and transformed accordingly to fulfill the present need of the building which at the moment as a visitor centre. This platform consists of intersecting spaces arranged contrasting the verticality of the main structure which will be either suspended between columns or hung from the canopy. The language of lightly touching the ground was an effort to preserve the site’s potential as an important archaeological site.

(Re)landscaping The site condition which is densely surrounded by palm oil trees is not reflective of the current site’s status as an important archaeological site. Relandscaping means retrieving back the original condition of the site which would involves replacing existing palm oil trees with indigenous tropical trees.

SITE PLAN

NOT TO SCALE

8 X 8 GRID DIVISION

WALL & CANOPY

SPATIAL ARRANGEMENT

POSSIBILITIES OF SPATIAL EXPANSION

A perspective view from the bottom of the slop looking up to the tower

9

3

CIRCULATION

11

8

12 10

14

15

13

6

16

5

7 LEGEND

2 4 1

LEVEL

00

SCALE 1:750

LEVEL

-01

SCALE 1:750

LEVEL

-02

SCALE 1:750

1 LOBBY 2 KIOSK / SOURVENIR SHOP 3 CAFE 4 OFFICE / ADMIN 5 MALE MUSOLLA 6 FEMALE MUSOLLA 7 GALLERY 1 8 GALLERY 1 EXTENSION 9 RESOURCE CENTER 10 GALLERY 2 11 GALLERY 2 EXTENSION 12 STAGE 13 RETRACTABLE AMPHITHEATER 14 GALLERY 3 (PERAK MAN) 15 STORAGE 16 OPEN GALLERY

LEVEL

-03

SCALE 1:750

“A specific indeterminate space is a space that is waiting for something to happen, a space where one can be alone or in a crowd. It is a space that atracts temporary proximity of different uses, densification of use and change of use” (Beigel, F. and Christou, P. 1996)


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