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90 Degrees

Rotate. Ascend. Turn East
An installation by HQ Architects for Jerusalem Design Week 2019.

 

Program Installation
Client Jerusalem Design Week
Location Jerusalem, Israel
Appointment 2019
Status
Built
Completion 2019
Size 400 m²
Project Architect Isam Qaymari, Raz Rozkin
Team Erez Ella, Matan Sapir, Eliahu Cohen, Ivi Vassilopoulou
Collaborators Ran Wolf, Mondo Stages, Tal Erez, Anat Safran
Photography Dor Kedmi


Context

Hansen House is a historic hospital that cared for people with leprosy, established in Jerusalem in 1887. Now transformed into a design, media and technology cultural center and is the home of the Jerusalem Design Week. The structure is under strict preservation regulations and it can only undergo minor changes.

The installation

Responding to the curatorial theme, EAST, while dealing with a sensitive historic context, HQ Architects designed 90 Degrees, a large scale installation that shifts the building’s orientation. Hansen House’s dominant character is oriented from south to north, creating a complex circulation between the interior spaces. Can a building change its orientation?

90 Degrees responds to both the curatorial theme, and to the spatial needs of the various exhibitions taking place during the Design Week. The content of the Design Week is built of distinct joints that create a temporary sequence through which the visitor will wish to move. 90 Degrees transforms the appearance and organization of the building by taking into consideration both the permanent structural limitations and the temporary needs of the Design Week.

The installation is comprised of a diagonal scaffolding system that climbs the building from west to east, from ground level to above the roof, and rotates the orientation 90 Degrees forcing the visitors to face towards the East. The steps form a physical platform approximately 14 meters high. This elevated space creates a link between the old and the new and suggests an alternative journey through Hansen House, while offering views beyond the building and the exhibition. The flexibility of the scaffolding as a material, together with its structural qualities enables the addition of a new space by gently surrounding and penetrating the existing building.

90 Degrees presents an ephemeral structure that creates new spaces, stimulates interaction between the building and the visitors, and suggests alternative sequences of movement by engaging issues of history, culture, orientation and experience.

1816 Hansen Model Picture.jpg
 
“The opportunity to revisit the historic building of Hansen House, an inseparable part of Jerusalem’s rich heritage, and to create a new, ephemeral space is extraordinary. By carefully engaging with the existing structure, we created an intervention that doesn’t just shift the positioning and appearance of Hansen House, but also our sense of place. 90 Degrees creates new spaces, stimulates interaction between the building and the visitors, and suggests alternative sequences of movement by engaging issues of history, culture, orientation and experience.’’
— Erez Ella
 

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