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#PUBLIC ARCHITECTURE PROJECTS

Montforthaus

Harmoniously embedded in the historical urban grain of the medieval old town of Feldkirch, in Austria, the Montforthaus is a multi-purpose cultural centre conceived by Hascher Jehle Architektur with a contemporary form cladded with the traditional Jura marble of the region.

The new Montforthaus is a multi-purpose cultural centre for the people of Feldkirch and the surrounding region.

It is versatile enough to host conventions, balls, trade fairs, classical concerts, pop concerts and theatre performances.

Unlike most concert halls and theatres, which are closed when there is no performance, the new Montforthaus is conceived as an “Open House” and is also home to the Feldkirch Tourist Information Centre and Vorarlberg Ticket Office.The summer garden on the roof of the building is a natural extension of the spaces within. High above the streets and squares, the various restaurant spaces offer impressive views over the town and the cultural landscape of the ravine-like Felsenau valley. From here one can look across to Schattenburg castle on its rocky promontory above the city.

The Montforthaus is harmoniously embedded in the historical urban grain of the medieval old town of Feldkirch.

While its formal articulation is demonstratively modern, its materiality picks up the traditional Jura marble of the region, setting up a dialectical frisson between the two and simultaneously weaving the new insertion into the existing fabric of the town.The organic flowing volume of the building stands apart from its historically evolved, small-scale surroundings as a freestanding object within the urban grain. While the previous building from the 1970s directly abutted the neighbouring buildings, the new Montforthaus is a separate entity with no front or back but rather a continuous perimeter that is equally attractive from all directions.

By positioning the foyer to one side of the central axis of the stage and auditorium, it was possible to neatly fit the large volume into the historical structure of the old town. The contours of the building’s exterior respond to the neighbouring streets and edges of open spaces, ensuring that the surrounding urban grain is balanced and accorded equal importance on all sides. Like a pebble in the riverbed of the town, the new cultural centre sits in the flow of urban space between three adjoining squares which fuse into a single large urban space that extends from the town’s park into the old town.The same natural flow of space continues into the building, leading visitors into a four-storey landscape of foyers and open galleries beneath a naturally illuminated glazed atrium roof. Via a Baroque-style sweeping stair, visitors ascend in spiral fashion up to the auditoria or to the bar on the roof, where they are rewarded with a view across to the historical Schattenburg and over the Rösslepark.

The building is both stage and vantage point from which to observe everyday life in the centre of the town. By setting back the building from the Rössleplatz, a new urban connection is created. The town no longer comes to an end at this point but continues seamlessly on into the adjacent Rösslepark. The previously constricted urban situation has been opened up, giving more space to the listed monument of the seven metre high historical town wall. Further space was created by reorganising the streetspace and providing cross-connections into the attractive lanes of the old town. The newly designed urban space of the Montfortplatz extends over an area of more than 3,500 sqm and is paved with typical granite cobblestone interspersed with islands of trees as well as a new fountain.

Montforthaus

Details

  • Montfortplatz 1, 6800 Feldkirch, Austria
  • Hascher Jehle Architektur