rolexreplica.is Timeless Architecture at Audemars Piquet’s La Maison des Fondateurs

Submitted by WA Contents

Timeless Architecture at Audemars Piquet’s La Maison des Fondateurs

United Kingdom Architecture News - Sep 13, 2014 - 13:35   5101 views

Timeless Architecture at Audemars Piquet’s La Maison des Fondateurs

Photo courtesy of BIG.

I often say that watchmaking and architecture are akin. Probably the most irrefutable reference for this is assertion is Le Corbusier whom emerged from his training as a watchmaker in La Chaux-de-Fonds to be one of the pioneers of modern architecture, as we know it today. For those unfamiliar, La Chaux-de-Fonds is a small city in Switzerland, which is the home of the International Museum of Watch Making.

Fast-forward to 2014 in Le Brassus, Switzerland, and rock-star architect Bjarke Ingels, Founder of BIG, has completed the design for La Maison des Fondateurs, an expansion of the headquarters of Audemars Piquet. Readers may be familiar with Bjarke, as I did jump a fence together with Bjarke and interview him on the site ofW57 in New York City. I was fortunate to spend some time with Bjarke recently to discuss La Maison des Fondateurs and share some insights with readers today.

Timeless Architecture at Audemars Piquet’s La Maison des Fondateurs

Bjarke Ingles, portrait. Photo courtesy of Stephen Voss.

Jacob Slevin: In 140 characters or less, please define your design thesis for La Maison des Fondateurs.

Bjarke Ingels: La Maison des Fondateurs is designed like a clockwork - shaped by its inner workings, the design provides maximum performance with minimum material.

Jacob Slevin: Le Corbusier, one of the world's most renowned architects, was likewise a watchmaker. Did you identify any connectivity between the art and practice of watchmaking and the art and practice of architecture?

Bjarke Ingels: Watchmaking, like architecture, is the art and science of invigorating inanimate matter with intelligence and performance. It is the art of imbuing metals and minerals with energy, movement, intelligence and measure - to bring it to life in the form of telling time. Unlike most machines and most buildings today that have a disconnect between the body and the mind, the hardware and the software, in watchmaking the form is the content - the geometric design is what makes the clock tick!

We have carried these principles with us in to the design for La Maison des Fondateurs and have attempted to completely integrate the geometry and the performance, the form and the function, the space and the structure, the interior and the exterior in a symbiotic whole.

Also I'm quite fascinated with the story of how Switzerland became a world-leader in watchmaking. In the 16th century Jean Calvin introduced a ban on jewelry in Geneva. Out of work, all the jewelers needed something else to do. Since the watch was seen as a functional tool it became a loophole in the ban and suddenly the skillsets of a whole profession migrated towards watchmaking.....Continue Reading

> via Huffington Post