Svaneke water tower

The Svaneke water tower, in the small town of Svaneke on the Danish island of Bornholm, was designed by award-winning architect Jørn Utzon and completed in 1952. It was the first successful project of the architect who would later design the Sydney Opera House.

Svaneke Water Tower

History

In 1951, the Svaneke town council was considering having a water tower built. The mayor, Emil Andersen, had just been discussing the matter with Preben Vistesen from Aalborg who had previous experience in the area. On his way back to Aalborg, Vistesen happened to meet Jørn Utzon in Copenhagen where they were both waiting for their return flight and had some time on their hands. Over a cup of coffee, Vistesen told him about Svaneke's intention to build a water tower and asked whether he would be interested in helping with the design. Utzon immediately sketched out his innovative idea on a paper serviette. Vistesen put the serviette in his pocket and presented it soon afterwards to the mayor, who was enchanted with the design.[1]

Despite strong opposition, Andersen managed to convince the town council that Utzon's design was worthwhile. In his own words, "It is the only water tower in Denmark that was agreed by a town council when all the votes were against the proposal." Utzon's design was finally accepted in April 1951 and the tower was completed in November 1952. [1]

Architecture

The surprisingly shaped water tower was inspired by the old sea marks used for assisting the navigation of ships at sea. The marks were used in the west of Jutland and in the Swedish archipelago from the end of the 16th century in cases when there were no other distinguishable markings along the coast.[2]

The pyramidal water tank is supported by three slender ferro-concrete legs which meet at the top of the tower. The centrally placed steps, also made of concrete, wind up elegantly from the ground.[3] The water tower was taken out of service in 1988 when alterations to the water supply system were introduced. Since 1990, it has been a listed building.[4]

The water tower in Svaneke was the first of five works by Utzon which can be characterized as concrete architecture. The water tower's tank supported by three sloping concrete legs make the structure thin but powerful. The other works which demonstrate Utzon's creativity with concrete are: the Sydney Opera House, Bagsværd Church, the Kuwait National Assembly and the Paustian Furniture House.[5]

gollark: Oh, we can do that trivially, we just aren't.
gollark: It would be an identically powerful Nvidia chip.
gollark: We could always have nanobees infiltrate your computer and substitute the integrated GPU for a Nvidia chip.
gollark: I know about the LHR thing.
gollark: No, I mean has it broken games.

See also

Kugelbake

References

  1. "Utzons vandtårn", Byforeningen Svaneke. (in Danish) Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  2. "The Utzon Water Tower", Bornholm in Pictures. Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  3. "Svaneke vandtårn", Synligbeton.dk. (in Danish) Retrieved 9 May 2010.
  4. Kjeld Brandt, "Jørn Utzon's vandtårn i Svaneke" (in Danish) Retrieved 9 May 2010.
  5. "Future Nordic Concrete Architecture", Norden: Nordic Innovation Centre, November 2010. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
  • Utzons vandtårn: Danish article from Svanekes Venner with historical photographs and construction plans.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.