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Sea and sky.


Inspired by tradition, formed by modern technology, this centre celebrates and explains the Melanesian culture of the Kanaks. Responses to sea and site have generated a heraldic he·ral·dic  
adj.
Of or relating to heralds or heraldry.



he·raldi·cal·ly adv.

Adj. 1.
 dance reflected in the waves.

'The return to tradition is a myth ... No people has ever achieved that. The search for identity, for a model, I believe it lies before us ... Our identity is before us': Jean-Marie Tjibaou's vision informs the new cultural centre at Noumea in New Caledonia New Caledonia, Fr. Nouvelle Calédonie, internally self-governing territory of France (2005 est. pop. 216,000), land area 7,241 sq mi (18,760 sq km), South Pacific, c.700 mi (1,130 km) E of Australia. . Tjibaou, sometime priest and doctorial student at the Sorbonne, was leader of the New Caledonian Adj. 1. New Caledonian - of or relating to New Caledonia  independence movement and, though he wanted his people to fully take part in the modern world, he was keenly aware of the need for his people to come to terms with their past and make a balance between traditional and world culture. 'Although I can share with a non-Kanak what I possess of French culture, it is impossible for him to share the universal element within my culture'.(1)

Tjibaou died in 1989,(2) but already it had been decided to build a centre for the Agence de Developpement de la Culture Kanak (ADCK ADCK AarF Domain Containing Kinase (antibody) ), and an international competition was held in 1991. Renzo Piano won, and began to refine his design for the Centre Culturel Tjibaou with the help of local people including the leader's widow, Marie Claude. The site which was given to the ADCK by the municipality of Noumea, is a thin peninsula which sticks out south into the blue lagoon. (It was here that Tjibaou had held the Melanesia 2000 festival in 1975, one of the key moments in the struggle for cultural and political recognition by France.) Early on in the programme for the centre, the indigenous bush was supplemented with transplanted Norfolk Island pines, those wonderful, stiff architectural trees which so gracefully articulate the sky-lines of the islands of the south-western Pacific.

From the first, Piano was concerned to learn from local culture, buildings and nature, but he was determined not to end up with a kitsch replication of Kanak huts. He took from them the ideas of the village cluster and the ribbed hut structure in which tall thin curved timber members cluster together at the top and carry the cladding. In the original vernacular, the ribs are of palm saplings; in Piano's (much larger) reinterpretation re·in·ter·pret  
tr.v. re·in·ter·pret·ed, re·in·ter·pret·ing, re·in·ter·prets
To interpret again or anew.



re
 of the forms, thay are made of laminated iroko Iroko can refer to:
  • iroko (hardwood)
  • Telfairia occidentalis, vine grown for food
, structurally linked by horizontal tubes and diagonal rod ties of stainless steel stainless steel: see steel.
stainless steel

Any of a family of alloy steels usually containing 10–30% chromium. The presence of chromium, together with low carbon content, gives remarkable resistance to corrosion and heat.
. The happy and carefully crafted conjunction of stainless steel and laminated timber is reminiscent of the IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries)  pavilion which travelled Europe so successfully over a decade ago,(3) but here the long wooden pieces are not so finely pared, partly because they are much bigger to achieve resistance to cyclones and earthquakes, and partly because they have to be tall to make a celebratory figure.

What Piano calls the 'cases', pavilions or abstracted huts, are of three heights, the tallest 28m, as high as an eight- or nine-storey urban building. They are arranged in three groups, the villages, in a very gently curving line that follows the axis of the the diameter of the sphere which is perpendicular to the plane of the circle.

See also: Axis
 peninsula. The cases are fundamentally circular in plan, but they open off a long connecting corridor, so the inner edge of each circle is honed off, allowing individual cases to lack into the connecting space, then beyond that into more conventional rectilinear rec·ti·lin·e·ar  
adj.
Moving in, consisting of, bounded by, or characterized by a straight line or lines: following a rectilinear path; rectilinear patterns in wallpaper.
 volumes (sometimes but not always part of the spatial flow). Here, planted courts penetrate the building, the flat stainless steel and glass roofs are supported on laminated flitched iroko columns; volumes are largely defined by timber and glass louvres, which form part of the passive cooling system. To the northwest, there is a strip between the irregular edge of the building and the sea, densely planted and carved into with terraces and clearings for public extensions of the building as open-air exhibition and performance spaces. And for the pedestrian route round the peninsula's perimeter which introduces visitors to the flora of the place and its mythic meanings, which are very powerful in Kanak culture.

Externally, the cases stretch their curves among and over the tall verticals and horizontals of the pines and eucalypts, making a heraldic dance against the sky which is partnered by reflections rippling in the lagoon. Piano hopes that the rot-proof iroko ribs will weather to the same pale silvery grey as the trunks of the indigenous palm trees. As well as being an abstracted hut, each case is a sort of forest. Each curved outer rib is linked to a straight vertical one which forms part of the structure of the perimeter of the enclosed space. The curved ribs carry horizontal slats, which have some effect on modifying the effects of the often high winds, and internal conditions are controlled by a passive system which uses louvres at the base of the perimeter wall and on the opposite face of the complex. They are opened and closed according to wind direction and intensity encouraging breezes through the spaces from which air is expelled along the highest points of the roofs.

It has to be admitted that the curved ribs have a largely symbolic role, but they do have a climate balancing function: 'I decided to tone down the resemblance between "my" huts and reducing the length of the vertical elements and giving the shells more open form ... the staves no longer meet at the top, as had initially been planned. The wind tunnel [showed] that this produced a greater effect of dynamic ventilation.'(4) Yet they have deeper resonances, some literal: the wind surging through the slats of the open outer carapace carapace (kâr`əpās), shield, or shell covering, found over all or part of the anterior dorsal portion of an animal. In lobsters, shrimps, crayfish, and crabs, the carapace is the part of the exoskeleton that covers the head and thorax  gives 'the huts a "voice": ... it is that of the Kanak villages and their forests'.(5)

Marie Claude Tjibaou, who is the president of the ADKC, understands the mediatory role of the building: 'Today, everyone is coming to see the architecture. Little by little, we will bring people to ask: why these arcs, why these vaults'. They will be instrumental in helping the Kanaks achieve her husband's ambition of telling 'the world that we are neither escapees from prehistory prehistory, period of human evolution before writing was invented and records kept. The term was coined by Daniel Wilson in 1851. It is followed by protohistory, the period for which we have some records but must still rely largely on archaeological evidence to  nor archaeological remains, but men of flesh and blood'.(6)

1 These quotations were provided by Renzo Piano Kanak culture (which is varied between different tribes and islands) is part of the Melanesian group. The New Caledonian archipelago is north of New Zealand New Zealand (zē`lənd), island country (2005 est. pop. 4,035,000), 104,454 sq mi (270,534 sq km), in the S Pacific Ocean, over 1,000 mi (1,600 km) SE of Australia. The capital is Wellington; the largest city and leading port is Auckland.  and east of Australia Norfolk island is to the south.

2 He was killed by Kanak extremists who opposed the agreement he had forged with the French for a referendum on independence.

3 AR March 1987

4 Piano, Renzo The Renzo Piano Notebook, Thames and Hudson, London, 1997, p180.

5 Ibid, p178.

6 From Piano.

Architect Renzo Piano Building Workshop, Genoa

Project team P. Vincent (associate in charge), D. Rat, W. Vassal vassal: see feudalism. , A. Chaaya, C. Jacckman, A. H. Temenides, J. B. Mothes, M. Henry, G. Modolo, A. El Jerari, A. Gallissian

Structural engineer Ove Arup & Partners; Agibat

Climate-control feasibility CSTB CSTB Centre Scientifique et Technique du Batiment (France)
CSTB Computer Science and Telecommunications Board (NRC)
CSTB Computer Science and Technology Board
CSTB Computer Science and Telecommunication Board
 

General coordination GEC GEC Gaseous Electronics Conference
GEC Gigabit EtherChannel
GEC Geriatric Education Center (US government; HRSA)
GEC General Electric Co.
GEC Google Earth Community (online community) 
 

Acoustics Peutz

Ethnologist eth·nol·o·gy  
n.
1. The science that analyzes and compares human cultures, as in social structure, language, religion, and technology; cultural anthropology.

2.
 A. Bensa

Landscaping Vegetude

Models O. Doizy

Photographs Hans Schlupp/architekturphoto
COPYRIGHT 1998 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:design and construction of a cultural center in Noumea, New Caledonia
Author:McInstry, Sheila
Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:Dec 1, 1998
Words:1171
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