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The Melsungen complex, in Stirlings own words, indicates
the ways in which, as architects, he and his colleagues felt:
We thought our design, if anything should respond to those
man-made objects in the campagna elements in the landscape
such as viaducts and bridges, canals and embankments. Also avenues
of trees and the straight edges of forests against fields. This
45-hectare site extends from the southern slope of a valley to the
top of a small hill which, although only 10 metres higher than its
surroundings, forms a visual interruption between the lower part
of the site and the town
The valley shape suggested two levels
of circulation and we proposed a large multi-storey car park in
the middle of the site, accessible via an enclosed footbridge to
the edges of the terrain and linking important parts of the factory.
Which makes an architectural image for the place, like those modern
road viaducts which contrast with the landscape and complement it
in a dramatic way; there are many of them to be seen in this part
of Hesse (Germany).
This footbridge is like a giant centipede marches across
the site. Stirling adds, the front zone is designed
like an open jardin anglais with a tree-lined canal in the form
of a river cascade, a bubbling lake, and stepped terraces and tree
henges.
In the rolling hills just outside the small town of Melsungen,
the Braun complex is approached from the western side. The long
bridge is apparent immediately, with its stained timber structure,
from a distance it represents a remarkable expanse. The administration
building, is carefully positioned astride the small 10 metre high
knoll to the left (west) of the elevation, its status unmistakable
there, compared with the remaining works and distribution centre.
The drive, as with a Capability Brown carriageway,
breaks into the landscape from the main road and runs with gentle
curves past the lake itself.
On the other side, at the end of the long pedestrian bridge, the
triangulated pavilion of the canteen is prominent against the mass
of the larger production building. To the east, and partly hidden
by the bridge, the great artificial convex mound of the distribution
and dispatch building, green-tinged, establishes its own correlation
with the surrounding landscape, a kind of parenthesis of its own
existing conformation.
Set in the green fields and woods, Stirling here provides a scheme
capable of further extension, but always in sympathy with the existing
landscape context. In fact, the architects were relieved to design
again, so long after the cancellation the masterpiece for Olivetti,
within the precedents of the twentieth century modern movement,
and of a functional tradition, and its actual rejection of history:
Stirling himself referred here to hoping to have achieved an unmonumental
lightness of being. But of course there was history in the chosen
context, a long-remembered landscape memory, indeed a resurgence
of the landscape sublime and English eighteenth century
precedent: not for the first time taken up enthusiastically on the
continent.
Melsungen is an extraordinary integration of architecture with
landscape site. Such is the massive scale of the Braun complex,
which manufactures here plastic medical products, distributing these
all over Germany from this site, that it is remarkable how Stirling
and Wilford, with Nageli, were actually able to harmonise such a
sheer volumetric mass with the surrounding countryside. Here was
an essentially metropolitan practice (and Nagelis own association
went back as far as 1979 when the three collaborated in Berlin)
which pulled off the trick in one sweep. There is an urbanism about
the headquarters buildings, with their own piazza and infrastructural
linkages (as further extended in 2000) which is essentially mainstream
Stirling and Wilford. But the disposition if the masses elsewhere
is ingenious. In dividing the site, rather than becoming embedded
within it, and drawing upon the functional tradition of bridges
and viaducts it became possible to establish a clear hierarchy of
building blocks, of all kinds of use, and to draw upon landscape
history to reconcile these insertions with the rural expanse and
its own inherent harmonies.
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