Steven Christensen Architecture
Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel
Steven Christensen Architecture
5. January 2017
Interior View, Tepidarium (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture, all images courtesy of v2com)
The design for Liepāja Thermal Bath and Hotel originates from a keen interest in the formal associations of the dome throughout architectural history, and more precisely, its role within the typology of the public bath.
The dome has been an important organizational and representational device throughout the history of the public bath, playing a central role in the most technologically innovative Roman bathing structures, through the myriad dim and atmospheric medieval Ottoman examples, and continuing on into countless Renaissance and Baroque precedents. The dome's semiological and organizational roles in these structures are closely aligned: by reinforcing centrality and singularity, the form renders unmistakably explicit the primacy of the circle of space directly below.
North Elevation (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
The representational efficiency of the dome has made it a favorite among patrons with an interest in reinforcing the notion of a centralized and singular power system, whether that system is absolute monarchy, monotheism, hegemonic dictatorship, etc. Not surprisingly, the form acquired more than a few problematic political associations during the first part of the 20th century, and despite postmodernism's light hand with classical form, the dome has never been fully rubbed clean of its fascist tarnish.
Exterior View, West Baths (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
The design seeks to undermine the conventional symbolic performance of the much maligned hemisphere by challenging its centripetal tendencies as well as its hierarchical bias. Working with its generative primitive, the sphere, we propose a multiplicity of domes, both upright and inverted, as a rhizomatic formal and organizational embodiment of a contemporary public that is democratic, horizontally empowered, and increasingly networked. Capitalizing on the seemingly serendipitous intersection of these friendly spherical forms, as well as the unique spaces between them within the poché, the project uses its sociopolitical conceptual foundation in service of an unorthodox spatial experience that is both spirited and atmospheric.
Interior View (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
Steven Christensen Architecture of Santa Monica, California has been named a winner in the first annual AAP American Architecture Prize, which recognizes the most outstanding architecture worldwide.
The AAP American Architecture Prize honors exceptional designs in 41 categories across three disciplines: architectural design, interior design, and landscape architecture. The firm’s design for Liepāja Thermal Bath won a Silver Award for Recreational Architecture.
Site Plan (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
Ground Floor Plan (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
Level 3 Plan (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
South Elevation (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
West Elevation (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
East Elevation (Image: Steven Christensen Architecture)
PROJECT DETAILS
Location
Liepāja, Latvia
Team
Steven Christensen (Principal), Devon Montminy, Cori Gunderson, Ingrid Lao
Status
Competition Entry