dmvA
Lorette Convent - Apartments Drabstraat
dmvA
6. 十一月 2017
Photo: Bart Gosselin (All photographs courtesy of v2com)
By provoking action and reaction between past and present through the application of contemporary architecture, the remodeling of this entire block of buildings — including landmark buildings such as Hooghuys and the former Lorette convent — adheres to this evolutionary principle.
Location: Drabstraat 6–10, 2800 Mechelen, Belgium
Design: dmvA
Principal: City Site/Van Poppel
Team: dmvA / David Driesen, Tom Verschueren / Valérie Lonnoy/
Engineer: Jan Van Aelst
General contractor: Bouwbedrijf Van Poppel nv
Built area: Restoration Hooghuys (965 m2), Apartments and parking (3770 m2)
Photo: Bart Gosselin
Concept: interweaving of history
The new development, Melano, is located between Hooghuys and Sweert. This apartment building deliberately leans towards Sweert and distances from Hooghuys, with a specific tension created by the cantilever on the first floor. The white brick architecture is a response to the partly lime-washed, partly plastered facade of Hooghuys and the classic uniform gables of Sweert. Covered terraces create a dialogue with the two-dimensionality of the historic facades on Drabstraat. In turn, integrated vertical lighting strips not only draw attention to the contemporary facade and, therefore, celebrate modern life, they also light the street and thereby dispense a contemporary idea of interaction with the public space.
Photo: Bart Gosselin
This building is also key to the restructuring of the site. As water finds its meandering way through the landscape, this project is devoted to the penetrable. The new building provides passage, by means of a raised point of contact with Hooghuys, for an alley that runs into the rear courtyard. The repurposed garden is a nod to the formerly sizeable Hooghuys garden, which reached Begijnenstraat and therefore provided access to the market square. Three centuries later, however, this area of greenery was closed off from Begijnenstraat by the L-shaped Lorette convent and girls’ school. The neo-gothic building highlights the impact of a closed and withdrawn religious community on a town. This voluminous wall is now broken through on the ground level to allow access to the Fish Market through a semi-public area that succeeds the playground that was once the Hooghuys garden. City dwellers are drawn into a place of alleys and squares.