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Pascal Bronner, Architecture, Building, London, Design, Image, Project
Pascal Bronner : Architecture Information
Work by Pascal Bronner, The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL
Pascal Bronner
Unit 10
The Iron Fortress - The Illusion of the River Puppet
On a calm afternoon the surface of the iron river perfectly reflects
the sky. This camouflage layer becomes the sky for the city of New
Malacovia beneath. As a perfect mimic of the real river below it is
an illusion of a river to the outside world:

As Pascal's project unfolds we are introduced to diasporic refugee
people, the Moldovians. They make their cities almost invisibly within
our cities, they power their cities with potatoes, and occasionally
a clue to the Moldovians existence is found within our familiar landscapes.
The narrative shows us their furniture, the spaces of their cities,
their customs and their stylistic concerns. As the narrative reaches
its last "reveal" we suddenly become aware that the Moldovians
are very small indeed and that the model we are looking at is not
a model at all - it is the city.
Model of a portable New Malacovia
The chance for every Malacovian to carry a blueprint of the Malacovian
Landscape. This blueprint is used to form new colonies and settlements
around the world and aids the idea of a sustainable culture:

Nevsky Avenue
The city bed of New Malacovia is a vast prairie of windows, which
mimic a flattened version of the main boulevard in St Petersburg:

New Malacovia - A Bonsai Landscape
New Malacovia - like any other building, city or landscape - will
evolve. Exposed to light, the potatoes begin to sprout. The landscape
is a living organism:

The Laboratory - The Hub Of New Malacovia City
From the Laboratory, roots of light sprout and carry heat and energy
to the infinite pockets of the underworld. The sunlight that passes
through the roots is stored beneath the windows so that at any point,
the people of New Malacovia can open them and be flooded with sunlight:

Elevation of the Laboratory
The laboratory penetrates the pixel blanket and is the sole connection
point with the outside world. This hub could be likened to a black
hole as from the surface it remains invisible as it absorbs all the
sunlight in its immediate surroundings:

The Post-it Notes
The laboratory hub is clad in a dense foliage of ideas. These ideas
appear as hundreds of thousands of humble post-it notes. The numerous
leaves of paper cling to their trunk, the laboratory hub. The hub
feeds on light and ideas to grow upwards through the pixel blanket:

Crafting a Miniature Architecture
The miniature architecture aims to embody the transient and intangible
nature of architecture. In theory, it will not only mimic, but aim
to replicate the moments so that the viewer can wholly consume its
infinite landscape. The observer becomes a traveler:

New Malacovia - The Endless Laboratory
This project investigates the design of a sustainable miniature architecture
based on a story from 'The Dictionary of Imaginary Places'. The story
records the emigration of a Nogai prince (an inventor) with some of
his compatriots during the Crimean War, and their settlement in the
Danube Delta, where they rebuilt their lost fatherland. This new settlement
became known as Malacovia. The Malacovians were avid inventors and
meticulous in the preservation of their ideas. My project extrapolates
the narrative to create a 21st century City and an architecture from
a tectonic translation of Malacovia.
The universe of New Malacovia is growing to house the ever-increasing
amount of ideas and thoughts. If we imagine the beginning of New Malacovia
to be an explosion in the laboratory, than we can envisage this imaginary
place as constantly expanding. While tools in the laboratory might
have begun life at human scale they have since been growing to become
the architectural elements of the Endless Laboratory. At any one time,
different scales coexist within the Malacovian universe. The components
of the expanding landscape have evolved over time, to accommodate
their tectonic function within this architecture. A process of natural
selection has meant that the strongest ideas conceived in the laboratory
have grown to become tectonic characters.
The prince was born in Crimea, an island of rich pastures, but he
spent his youth in St. Petersburg. As a consequence, New Malacovia
became a hybrid of rural and urban landscape taking elements from
both places. The city bed of New Malacovia is a vast prairie of windows,
which mimic a flattened version of the main boulevard in St Petersburg.
The New Nevsky Avenue stretches to infinity in the river valley.
A second river formed of a blanket of pixels made of iron foil suspended
on fine vertical pins, camouflages the city of New Malacovia. The
bottom of each pin penetrates a buoyant cork so that the surface blanket
effectively becomes a puppet of the much shallower original river.
The void created between the fake pixel-river and the real river is
occupied by the Malacovians. The original Danube River remains a body
of water beneath New Malacovia, and takes the weight of the entire
city.
On a calm afternoon the surface of the iron river perfectly reflects
the sky. This camouflage layer becomes the sky for the city of New
Malacovia beneath. As a perfect mimic of the real river below it is
an illusion of a river to the outside world. The city becomes an iron
fortress, in terms of the materiality of the iron pins and the fortified
pixel blanket, protecting the infinite archive of ideas.
St Petersburg, the culinary capital of Russia introduced the prince
to the humble potato - a great energy source and the staple of Russian
cuisine. In his laboratory he would experiment with potatoes. By using
pins, wire, and foil to draw energy from these spuds, he would turn
them into eco-batteries that would eventually power the city, turning
Malacovia into a sustainable Bonsai City that feeds on light and ideas,
and a blueprint for future generations of Malacovian descent.
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More student work from
Bartlett School
of Architecture in 2009
The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL
Wates House
22 Gordon Street
London WC1H 0QB
Neil
Spiller
Professor of Architecture and Digital Theory at The Bartlett
UCL
Buildings London
London
Architecture

Comments / photos for the Pascal Bronner page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Pascal Bronner - page : adrian welch / isabelle
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