TERPEN (MOUNDS); WAVE, FORT, DUNE & ISLAND

TERPEN (MOUNDS); WAVE, FORT, DUNE & ISLAND

Commissioned by the municipal of Leeuwarden

In the VINEX* district Zuiderburen near Leeuwarden are four contemporary ‘mounds’. An important theme in this assignment was the Frisian landscape that exists of ‘one-fifth land and four-fifth air’.
The slopes in the flat landscape, caused by mounds, are the inspiration for the visual slopes in the flat surface of the mounds in Zuiderburen. A wavy surface is created by shifting the swaying lines just a little bit in respect to each other. But what seems to be high on one side, looks to be low from the other side; high or low, up or down, shore or ditch, these perceptions are all based on the standpoint of the onlooker. This way, various compositions are created that conjure the image of different kinds of landscapes with each their own shape and colour combination.
Four landscapes reference the protection against or the threat from the water; a dune, a wave, an island, and a fort.
Each ‘mound’ represents the primal elements: the dune represents air (wind), the wave represents water, the island represents earth, and the fort represents fire.

Design: 2002
Completion: 2003
Click HERE for a booklet about this project (Dutch)

*VINEX is short for ‘Vierde Nota Ruimtelijke Ordening Extra’, or ‘Fourth Note of Spatial Planning Extra’ and contains the guidelines for the building of new residential areas in the period between 1 January 1995 and 1 January 2005.

FONTIS GEOMETRICA

FONTIS GEOMETRICA

Commissioned by the municipal Reiderland (Groningen)

The former, pentagonal fortification of the spa Nieuweschans is, just like its mineral source, more of a thing you know about than something you actually see. But, in the water of a newly dug channel, circular waves spring from the five points of a sunken pentagram. In the short moment that the waves touch each other, they create a pentagonal star on the water’s surface.

Fontis Geometrica is also a commemorative monument. Each Tuesday at 12 o’ clock, the system changes from five to six wells. A hexagram appears on the surface of the water 99 times, a ‘Star of David’. Between 1942 and 1944, each Tuesday a deportation train left camp Westerbork. 99 times these trains passed Nieuweschans, the last station in The Netherlands for over a 100,000 Jews.

Design: 2002
Click HERE for a booklet about this design. (Dutch)