Printer Friendly
The Free Library
6,672,335 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Naval engagement.


A chandler's building in Helsinki's island fortress, much altered by time and enemy attrition, is reinterpreted with robust sympathy.

Suomenlinna(1) was built to guard the mouth of Helsinki's huge natural harbour in the eighteenth century by the great Swedish military architect Augustin Ehrensvard(2) before the city was envisioned as the capital of Finland.(3) Suomenlinna was of great strategic importance. On the approaches to St Petersburg, it straddles a cluster of islands with an intricately woven network of daunting daunt  
tr.v. daunt·ed, daunt·ing, daunts
To abate the courage of; discourage. See Synonyms at dismay.



[Middle English daunten, from Old French danter, from Latin
 rubble bastions, curtain walls and ravelins punctuated by austere ashlar NeoClassical ne·o·clas·si·cism also Ne·o·clas·si·cism  
n.
A revival of classical aesthetics and forms, especially:
a. A revival in literature in the late 17th and 18th centuries, characterized by a regard for the classical ideals of reason, form,
 openings. In its heyday as the Gibraltar of the North
This article is about the nickname as used to describe Luxembourg City. Less commonly, Sveaborg is known by the same epithet.
The 'Gibraltar of the North' (French: Gibraltar du Nord 
, it was the exemplar of absolutely up-to-date defensive technology, yet now the huge battered stone defences are romantically overgrown overgrown

said of a part that has not been kept trimmed.


overgrown hoof
overgrown hooves put unusual stresses on bones and tendons and allow for distortion of the wall and sole.
, and most of the inner buildings they protected are green mounds. The fortress fell without a shot being fired when Russia seized Finland from Sweden in 1808. But in 1855, many of the buildings were demolished by mortar fire from the combined British and French fleets which attacked in a sideshow See Windows SideShow.  of the Crimean War Crimean War (krīmē`ən), 1853–56, war between Russia on the one hand and the Ottoman Empire, Great Britain, France, and Sardinia on the other. The causes of the conflict were inherent in the unsolved Eastern Question. . Some of the structures were repaired by the Russians, then by the newly free Finns after 1920. They were partly destroyed again by bombing in the chaos of 1944.

For all this violence and destruction, and its symbolism of rule by others, Suomenlinna is special for the Finns.(4) The buildings that remain are carefully preserved and used as museums. The latest to be converted is the Inventory Chamber, which was originally built as a chandlery between 1778 and 1783.(5) An elegant three-storey Neo-Classical block with a central pedimented portico faced the sea. Later, it was rather incongruously terminated at its northern end by a rough log building inclined to the main axis. The Crimean War bombardment severely damaged the Swedish Classical block, and the Russians restored it in sparely functional fashion, two storeys without the portico; it became in effect a row of five warehouses. In the destruction of 1944, the log building went up in flames In Flames is a melodic death metal band from Gothenburg, Sweden founded in 1990. Along with Dark Tranquillity and At the Gates, they pioneered what is now known as melodic death metal. . The building was subsequently shortened and continued to be a naval store.

Now, the old building has been restored as a series of galleries and an auditorium, and a new part has been added at the north end to provide entrance, shop, utilities and so on. It is on the site of the log structure and takes its axis. New takes other cues from old by using the same sort of red brick, having a clear structure (though primarily steel rather than timber), and being very clear in its organization. The difficult junction between old and new is managed by making a big steel portal that provides the main axial roof support of the new; it straddles the old, welcoming its north end under the generous roof. A steel order, expressed externally as free-standing columns in front of the glass entrance and as engaged ones in the body of the wall, supports rafters that bear on the big portal. Modern steel and huge pine members reclaimed from parts of the eighteenth-century building work together in the new structure.

The glazed entrance is part of a transparent hinge between old and new, with a spare steel spiral stair acting as metaphorical pin. Beyond, is the granite from which Finland grows, and a slope rising to the Imperial yellow of the remaining barrack BARRACK. By this term, as used in Pennsylvania, is understood an erection of upright posts supporting a sliding roof, usually of thatch. 5 Whart. R. 429.  buildings. To the left of the entrance is the reception desk, behind which is the shop. Above these is slung a second storey of offices, visually separated from the main shell and with light chutes on both sides. The sectional gesture is intended to evoke the ghost of the old log building, which as a rigging store, would have had such a hovering place in which to keep spars.

To the right of the entrance is the enfilade en·fi·lade  
n.
1. Gunfire directed along the length of a target, such as a column of troops.

2. A target vulnerable to sweeping gunfire.

3.
 of the old building. Here intervention has been kept to a minimum. Big warehouse spaces do of course usually make good galleries, and alterations have been made obvious, as the most recent episodes of a story which is clearly told in the brave and often tormented fabric. Huge pine beams are supported on massive timber columns; outer walls remain roughly whitewashed brick; changes in bond and joint give a subtle portrait of the history of the place.

1 Sveaborg in Swedish.

2 Augustin Ehrensvard (1710-1772) lies in the middle of his creation in a magnificent Neo-Classical tomb reputedly re·put·ed  
adj.
Generally supposed to be such. See Synonyms at supposed.



re·puted·ly adv.

Adv. 1.
 designed by his king Gustavus III (with J. T. Sergel).

3 Under Swedish rule, the capital was Abo (Turku) on the west coast opposite Sweden on the Gulf of Bothnia Noun 1. Gulf of Bothnia - a northern arm of the Baltic Sea; between Sweden and Finland
Aaland islands, Ahvenanmaa, Aland islands - an archipelago of some 6,000 islands in the Gulf of Bothnia under Finnish control
. Under the Russians, it was moved to Helsinki, which guards the Gulf of Finland Noun 1. Gulf of Finland - an eastern arm of the Baltic Sea; between Finland and Estonia
Baltic, Baltic Sea - a sea in northern Europe; stronghold of the Russian navy
 that terminates at St Petersburg.

4 And one of the country's four World Heritage sites.

5 Probably by Fredrik Henrik af Chapman Fredric Henric af Chapman (September 9 1721 in Gothenburg – August 19 1808) was a Swedish naval architect, promoted to vice admiral in 1791, manager of the shipyard at Karlskrona between 1782-1793.  (1721-1808) whose work on the other side of the Gulf of Bothnia at Karlskrona was shown in AR December 1998, pp49-53.

Architect

Laiho-Pulkkinen-Raunio

Design team

Mikko Pulkkinen, Tiitta Itkonen

Interior design

Philip Kronqvist

Photographer

Studio Voitto Niemela
COPYRIGHT 1999 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:Chandlery Museum, Suomenlinna, Helsinki, Finland
Author:Miles, Henry
Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:Jun 1, 1999
Words:835
Previous Article:Glazing Arizona.(Will Bruder's Museum of Contemporary Art in Scottsdale, Arizona)
Next Article:Industrial icon.(transformation of Kuppersmuhle in Duisburg, Germany)
Topics:



Related Articles
Northern light. (national forest museum in Punkaharju, Finland)
Birthday celebrations. (activities to commemorate Finnish architect Alvar Aalto)
CORRECTION.(to 'Cows' milk, diabetes connection bolstered' in June 26, 1999 issue)(Brief Article)(Correction Notice)
FINE FINNISH.(Brief Article)
Tuomo Manninen, Workers--Vash Avtomobil (Your Car), 2001.(Finnish photographer)(Brief Article)
BUSINESSMAN PROFITS FIGHTING GRAFFITI.(News)
U.S. HOPES YELTSIN CAN BE SWAYED : SUMMIT MAY BE KEY TO NATO EXPANSION.(NEWS)
Tabula gratulatoria.
Curriculum vitae.
Miami University and Helsinki University of Technology in paper partnership.(World Watch)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles