The area of Stud Farm Lipica is one of the most remarkable natural and cultural monuments in Slovenia. The stud farm was founded in 1580 when a decision was made at the Habsburg court to raise horses, a key strategic commodity of the time, in their own territory. The Andalusian horse proved to be ideal - the Karst, where the stud farm is located, is very similar to Spain in its soil and climate, likely leading Charles II, Archduke of Austria to use the abandoned summer mansion belonging to the archbishop of Trieste for the court stud farm. Two hundred years of intensive breeding and selecting for desirable traits ultimately produced the renowned Lipizzaner breed.
The area of cultivated karst landscape of Stud Farm Lipica comprises laid out pastures and meadow areas featuring protective fences, oak groves, and tree lanes. Lipica's cultural landscape is a self-contained and redeveloped natural environment whose development has been rooted in the centuries-long tradition of raising purebred horses. As required by the horse-breeding, people have ameliorated and cultivated the barren karst landscape into surfaces suitable for grazing and haying. Lipica thus gained its present-day congruous appearance before 1817, as evidenced by a contemporary land survey depiction. Even before this time, the entire estate had been homogenously fenced off by a typical karstic dry stone wall 8 km in length. Such extensive undertaking did not merely fulfil the functional aspect but also held symbolic significance for the comprehensiveness and exceptionality of Lipica's cultural landscape. In the historical sense, the land use has always been committed to uninterrupted raising of the singular breed of horses. The spatial congruity of the original stud farm producing one of the oldest breeds of horses gives Lipica's cultural landscape the mark of exceptionality and makes it peerless on a global scale.
The historic built core of Lipica, designed around the Renaissance mansion, gained the appearance of a congruous whole in the early decades of the 17th century. Through the ages, it had continued to develop until large tourist accommodation buildings were built in the 1970s, as the exceptionality of Stud Farm Lipica piqued the interest of visitors from across the world.
Maestoso Hotel & Spa is the largest of all accommodation buildings in Lipica. Together with the casino, it is the visitors' primary contact with the stud farm environment. Its relatively aggressive appearance - due to the use of architectural elements of a certain period - poses a strong, even distracting contrast with the smoothness of the access paths used by the visitors to access the complex as a whole. The distinctive line of white fences which undulate among the green tree lanes and the rest of the upkept natural landscape with the grazing herds of the celebrated white horses terminates rather ungraciously at the car park with the overbearing presence of the existing hotel building.
The fundamental guideline in designing the renovation and expansion of the hotel was to find a way to tone down the building's presence in the space. Instead of the customary pursuit of the most appropriate appearance, the main consideration became the attempt at dematerialising the built masses. The proposed intervention proposes purging the hotel's facade of all added architectural elements and unifying the structure's expression by establishing a new, light load-bearing structure of the balconies, which have so far only featured on parts of the buildings. The new structural membrane enveloping the entire hotel and swimming pool area establishes a sort of an intermediate space between the buildings and the landscape. The interplay of light and shade breaks down the monolithic built masses and, together with the envisaged greening of the existing volume with climbing plants, dematerialises the building to the greatest extent possible and endows it with a distinctive and recognisable character. The swimming pool building, which doesn't feature balconies and where the large glass surfaces represent the key element of the existing facade, sees the timber-structure enclosure augmented with reflective glazing, which further dematerialises the volume.
Special attention was devoted to the planned expansion of accommodation capacity, which would contribute to the already substantial built mass. Crucially, all the existing service- and other un(der)used facilities are repurposed as new accommodation; in this way, the increase in capacity is found primarily on the inside rather than on the outside. The only additions to the original volume are a reduced deck floor, which replaces the currently unused gable roof, and a short courtside wing of the hotel. The latter does double duty of also blocking the views from the existing rooms onto the service yard, another insensitive formerly intervention into this delicate space.
For the building to be better connected with the cultural landscape, the renovation intervention also envisages the elimination of the car park immediately in front of the building, transforming it into a park so as to gain the room for the expansion of the covered exterior programme terraces. All the eaves are also designed as a latticed structure of white timber glue-laminated beams, which provides an additional upgrade to the new, distinctly recognisable expression of the complex. The exterior paving is predominantly executed in compressed bonded sand, which softly links the function surfaces of the hotel with the laid out natural landscape of the stud farm.
The interiors of the renovated hotel and pool section are designed as a modern interpretation of the horse-stable interior spaces. As such, the public programme is designed as a particularly flexible space, which may be adapted depending on a given need using the folding partition walls. The existing buildings are stripped to the raw concrete structure, which remains visible and acts as a suitable frame for the minimal additional interventions ensuring a warm expression of the interior space. Combining the use of materials which the visitors associate with the materials used in the stables with the visible installations network without needless concealment mentally connects the interiors of all the stud farm's buildings into a inseparable whole. The raw iron, timber boards, hay, the concrete floors in the rooms and the floors made of cut wooden dowels in the public programme combined with carefully designed lighting and small, movable pieces of furniture and decoration form a warm space, which becomes a logical enhancement to the complex's unique programme and location.


year 2018
status in progress


size 11.380 m2
site 20.650 m2
footprint 6.600 m2


client Holding Kobilarna Lipica
location Lipica, Slovenia
coordinates 45°40'07.1"N 13°52'57.1"E


architecture ENOTA
project team Dean Lah, Milan Tomac, Polona Ruparčič, Eva Tomac, Carlos Cuenca Solana, Urška Malič, Sara Mežik, Nuša Završnik Šilec, Peter Sovinc, Jakob Kajzer, Jurij Ličen, Peter Karba, Sara Ambruš, Goran Djokić


collaborators Spacer (visualisations), Bruto (landscape architecture)


                       
    • 项目完工照片:待补充……

                           
      • 平面与结构图:
      vsszan897050803411.jpg vsszan897050803412.jpg vsszan897050803413.jpg vsszan897050803414.jpg vsszan897050803415.jpg vsszan897050803416.jpg vsszan897050803417.jpg vsszan897050803418.jpg vsszan897050803419.jpg vsszan8970508034110.jpg

                             
        • 效果与概念图:
        vsszan8970508034111.jpg vsszan8970508034112.jpg vsszan8970508034113.jpg vsszan8970508034114.jpg vsszan8970508034115.jpg vsszan8970508034116.jpg vsszan8970508034117.jpg vsszan8970508034118.jpg vsszan8970508034119.jpg vsszan8970508034120.jpg vsszan8970508034121.jpg vsszan8970508034122.jpg vsszan8970508034123.jpg vsszan8970508034124.jpg vsszan8970508034125.jpg vsszan8970508034126.jpg vsszan8970508034127.jpg vsszan8970508034128.jpg vsszan8970508034129.jpg vsszan8970508034130.jpg vsszan8970508034131.jpg vsszan8970508034132.jpg vsszan8970508034133.jpg vsszan8970508034134.jpg vsszan8970508034135.jpg vsszan8970508034136.jpg vsszan8970508034137.jpg vsszan8970508034138.jpg vsszan8970508034139.jpg vsszan8970508034140.jpg vsszan8970508034141.jpg vsszan8970508034142.jpg vsszan8970508034143.jpg vsszan8970508034144.jpg vsszan8970508034145.jpg vsszan8970508034146.jpg vsszan8970508034147.jpg vsszan8970508034148.jpg vsszan8970508034149.jpg

                               
          • 转载自:Archilovers
          • 设计师:ENOTA
          • 坐落:Lipica / Slovenia / 2018
          • 语言:English
          • 阅读原文
          Ai 分析中……

          暂无用户创作记录!~

          记录用户以此项目图片为灵感使用Ai进行二次创作。

          暂时没有评论,你回一个呗!~

          您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册序赞号

          快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表