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Heaven and earth: the almost pantheistic tradition of Northern churches is continued in this reinterpretation of our times.


Inside Jensen & Skodvin's church at Mortensrud, the world seems turned upside down. A heavy masonry wall hovers over a transparent base; the usual progression in a building of mass to lightness, dark to light is completely subverted. Powerfully so, for the church continues the brilliant Scandinavian Lutheran tradition of making numinous nu·mi·nous  
adj.
1. Of or relating to a numen; supernatural.

2. Filled with or characterized by a sense of a supernatural presence: a numinous place.

3.
 spaces that are intimately connected to landscape, fusing ritual and experience of natural, celebrating God-made and artefact See artifact. . The inversion of normal architectonic ar·chi·tec·ton·ic   also ar·chi·tec·ton·i·cal
adj.
1. Of or relating to architecture or design.

2. Having qualities, such as design and structure, that are characteristic of architecture:
 expectation is not just wilful wil·ful  
adj.
Variant of willful.


wilful or US willful
Adjective

1. determined to do things in one's own way: a wilful and insubordinate child 
, but has immense importance for the nature of space and experience. In some of the best new Lutheran churches, the sky is perhaps too dominant, glare can be a severe problem: even reading a prayer book can sometimes be quite difficult. At Mortensrud, the connection of humanity and nature is celebrated subtly in many dimensions.

On a ridge of the glacier-scraped Oslo countryside, the church has been made to the most minimal of specifications -- the budget did not allow more than the average cost per square metre of social housing in the city. The architects have celebrated the site. As many trees as possible have been preserved. Untouched glaciated rocks are allowed to rise through the concrete floor of the church and the gentle sloping parvis par·vis  
n.
1. An enclosed courtyard or space at the entrance to a building, especially a cathedral, that is sometimes surrounded by porticoes or colonnades.

2. One of the porticoes or colonnades surrounding such a space.
 that connects it to the parish hall.

A simple, almost agricultural steel shed has been transformed into a sacred space sacred space,
n space—tangible or otherwise—that enables those who acknowledge and accept it to feel reverence and connection with the spiritual.
. Steel beams carry the drystone See Dhrystones.  upper walls that are themselves enclosed in glass skins. Light pierces through the heaviness of the stone, but never enough to be blinding -- the effect is not dissimilar to that of some mosques where domes are made heaven-like by small glass cups, making the upper part of the interior sparkling yet gentle. At pew level, glass walls allow interior and exterior, man's place and God's nature, to flow together without glare. The pitched roof itself is very much an expression of industrialized in·dus·tri·al·ize  
v. in·dus·tri·al·ized, in·dus·tri·al·iz·ing, in·dus·tri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To develop industry in (a country or society, for example).

2.
 agricultural vernacular -- perhaps a contemporary middle-class metaphor of the stable in Bethlehem.

The strange stone walls of the church are made by inserting horizontal steel plates a metre apart welded to the columns and to help bear the loads of the masonry. From the plates, brackets project to support and stiffen stiff·en  
tr. & intr.v. stiff·ened, stiff·en·ing, stiff·ens
To make or become stiff or stiffer.



stiff
 the external glass skin. The architects say that they have achieved their effects at such economy mainly by avoiding conventional "proprietary" systems for facades, structures, walls, floors ... Rather we used very basic methods and techniques and surprisingly found out, again and again, that not only was it cheaper it also gave us far greater architectural freedom'. The result is a triumph of economy, and a distinguished contribution to the very fine tradition of modern sacred spaces in Scandinavia.

The parish hail is more clumsy than the church, and after debate, the jury decided that its execution prevented this very inventive and sensitive complex from getting an award, though all were happy to recommend it for high commendation.

RELATED ARTICLE: Architect

Jensen & Skodvin Arkitektkontor, Oslo, Norway

Project team

Jan Olav Jensen, Annelise Bjerkan, Torstein Koch, Torunn Golberg, Borre Skodvin, Einar Malrnquist, Siri Moseng, Vibeke Jenssen

Photographs

Jan Olav Jensen, Jiri Havron, Per Berntsen
COPYRIGHT 2002 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:514
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