Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects recently won a competition to design a new Sports and Culture Campus in Gellerup. The winning team includes MASU Planning ApS, Loop Architects and COWI A/S.
Located in a community in western Aarhus that is seeing an influx of redevelopment and revitalisation, the sprawling Gellerup Sports and Culture Campus will comprise a library, facilities for local residents, a playful activity house for circus, soccer, school and climbing - and potentially a unique public swimming pool. The campus is expected to attract more than 600,000 visitors annually.
"When designing the campus, our intention was to create a welcoming place that is open and relevant for the local community, while also appealing to residents from across Aarhus and the world," commented Trine Berthold, Associate Partner at Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects. "We hope to draw people into the campus's various elements with architecture that is rooted in the local environment, but also speaks to an international audience."
Located in the western part of Aarhus Kommune, Gellerup is the city's most culturally diverse district with residents relocating to the neighbourhood from all corners of the globe. The Gellerup Sports and Culture Campus is a part of the city's ambitious Master Plan, a project aimed at improving the quality of life and safety in the area in collaboration with the community's residents.
The winning proposal presented an inviting building structure that breaks up the city's existing boxy grid with an open, flowing layout that strengthens community ties, neighbourhood democracy and cohesion. The architecture supports openness and creates space for people to meet each other by overlapping buildings and spaces in an intuitive way.
"In a community as diverse as Gellerup, it is important that the new campus be a democratic place that is friendly, unpretentious and easy to move through so that it encourages use by every member of the district and interaction between people of all walks of life," added Berthold.
Work on-site is planned to begin in early 2018, with completion estimated to be in 2021.