Provost Residence St Gerold – Riding Hall, St. Gerold

Provost Residence St Gerold - Riding Hall, St. Gerold
Builder-Owner
Propstei St. Gerold
Location
St. Gerold
Completion
1997
Projectfacts
n.b.ar. 800,00 m², GFA 880,00 m²,
GBV 4.710,00 m³

Timber and glazing are used to create a sense of protection in an open space.

After decades of decay, the St. Gerold’s Priory was carefully restored. Today it is a thriving cultural centre. After the renovation of the existing facilities, it was decided to expand the complex to include a riding school for people with both developmental and physical disabilities.

The new structure that houses the ridging school extends from the southwestern corner of the Priory framing the garden courtyard space. The large mono-pitched roof extends over the entire new building and gracefully follows the incline of the sloping hill. The interior of the hall is characterised by the sense of protected openness that is created by the commanding effect of roof and the large glass panels used on three sides of the building. The visitor doesn’t feel they are in an enclosed space because the building does not centre around one axes, instead it reaches outwards to the views of the surrounding trees and rolling hills.

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Large sliding gates open for the horses to be able to exercise and graze on a fenced paddock. The broad, projecting canopy features a skylight, giving the hall ample amounts of light, especially during the winter. The slender struts act as the window wall supports. Single-panel windows were used since they allow for greater transparency and less reflection. The use of glazing means that the riding school is protected from wind and weather, but retains the feeling of being part of the open landscape. Insulation was not required since the sun regulates the temperature perfectly.

The roof construction is supported by six-part straddles in the middle. The converging, pyramid shaped tension bars rest on the tip of a tension strip. The black, slender steel tension bars fade into the background, hence the straddles seem to hover over the room, giving it a sense of dynamism. The diagonal elements set in front of the glass walls on the inside to provide support against the wind are similarly unpretentious, since they are almost invisible in back-lit conditions. Timber and steel are used to their maximum effect in this project, with clear architectural intentions.

 

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Projectdetails

Project support
Project Leader
Wolfgang Elmmenreich
Technical planning
Structural Engineering
merz kaufmann partner GmbH, Dornbirn
Awards
Preis für Neues Bauen in den Alpen
1999
IOC/IAKS AWARD Bronze
2003
Vorarlberger Hypo-Bauherrenpreis
1998
Publikationen
Reithalle St. Gerold
B-072Architektur in Österreich im 20. und 21. Jahrhundert, S. 2812016
Reithalle Propstei St. Gerold
Z-185Kauppalehti Optio 19/2010, S. 92-932010
Manège de Saint-Gerold
Z-100d´Architectures Nr. 128, S.302003
St. Gerold – Reithalle Probstei
Z-105sb Sportstättenbau, Sonderheft, 2003, S. 74-752003
IAKS – Award 2003
Z-107Schule&Sportstätte, N. 5/2003, S.8-92003
Reithalle Probstei St. Gerold
Z-096sb Sportstätten und Bäderanlagen, 5/2002, S. 383-3842002
Reithalle
B-004Kapfinger / Zschokkearchitektur szene österreich, S. 891999
Reithalle in St. Gerold
B-019Christoph Mayr FingerleNeues Bauen in den Alpen, Architekturpreis 1999, S. 122 – 1271999
Reithalle in St. Gerold
Z-053Wolfgang Jean StockBaumeister, 06/1998, S. 48-511998
Copyrights
Text
Hermann Kaufmann + Partner ZT GmbH
Texttranslation
Photography
Ignacio Martinez
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