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10 years, 3 months ago
Acoustic Shells by Flanagan Lawrence
Filled under: Architecture, Front Page
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'Biography' presents a wide selection of works from Elmgreen & Dragset's complex universe, including sculpture, performance and interactive installations. Works from the late 1990s onwards will be shown together with recent projects, ...
Photo Anders Sune Berg
perrotin.com

The brief called for a stage and shelter to be sited in a sunken garden beside the beach in Littlehampton. Our strategy has been to create a pair of doubly curved sprayed concrete shells which emerge from the field of grass.

One shell faces the town and forms the principal bandstand. The acoustic design of the interior creates a reflective surface to project the sound of the performers to the audience in the sunken garden. The other shell faces the beach and forms a more intimate structure as a shelter for listening to the sound of the sea or for buskers to perform facing the promenade.

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

The shell structures have been created without formwork with the concrete sprayed directly on to the reinforcement mesh. The majority of the concrete shell is only 100mm thick and relies on the double curved geometry to span the stage.

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

The two shells appear like white land forms emerging from the grass of the greensward. This is reflects the historical context of the concrete sound mirrors along the south coast at Dungeness, and the visually striking form of the local sand dunes.

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

photo flanaganlawrence.com

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