From fortification to contemplation

Navn
Juliette Joy Ringrose
Uddannelsesgrad
Kandidat
Institut
Bygningskunst, By og Landskab
Program
Arkitektur, Rum og Tid
År
2021

This project imagines a new function for a fortification island on the outskirts of Copenhagen. The existing qualities that grace the site become more accessible and are also translated into new spaces for contemplation and rituals. A new path through the landscape leads to an underground chapel attached onto an existing fort on Vestvolden known as Dobbeltkaponiere XXI.

A new tunnel-bridge lands on the island and spirals down to a an underground chapel. The chapel attaches onto the old fort.
Plan and Sections
1
/3
Visualisations of the new spaces.
Visualisations
1
/7
The laminated drawing consists of three layers that are tied to three different scales. The layers overlap and exchange information, allowing the drawing to become a place of its own. The drawing becomes a tool to understand the site, and also to shape it.
The Laminated Drawing
1
/10
This series of images from the point cloud illustrates the forts relation to the terrain and vegetation.
The Fort in the Landscape
1
/4
This series of images from the pointcloud reveals what is hidden in the dark.
Scanning in the dark
1
/8
A white stripe of light shoots out of the dark boxes and catches a section of the landscape. This series of images from the point cloud illustrates the contrast and relation between the dark underground rooms and the bright surrounding landscape.
Camera Obscura
1
/4

Det Kongelige Akademi understøtter FN’s verdensmål

Siden 2017 har Det Kongelige Akademi arbejdet med FN’s verdensmål. Det afspejler sig i forskning, undervisning og afgangsprojekter. Dette projekt har forholdt sig til følgende FN-mål
CV
Uddannelse og relevante kurser

Vera School of Art and Design

Visual Art. Painting and installation art.
Andre aktiviteter

Construction experience, KADK X Dinesen Summer school, Jutland

Initial design and construction of a wooden hut: Structure, facade and interior

The summer school consisted of a three-day design workshop prior to a two-week on-site building process. The project was a collaboration between 20 architecture students and 3 teachers from the Royal Danish Academy, and a family company of wood suppliers named ‘Dinesen’. The building process had a hands-on approach, and took place in a small forest.

Contribution to Oslo Architecture Triennale: ‘The Architecture of Degrowth’

• Initial concept of a book: ‘Nye Hjem i Norge’ (New homes in Norway)
• Co-author of a chapter: ‘Hjemmenes sollyset’ (Sunlight in the home)
• Facilitation of three events discussing the themes from the book

In a group named ‘The Family’, we developed and produced a book for an exhibition at the National museum in Oslo. The project discussed questions tied to home, family and architecture in a future degrowth society.

Research project on Seto Art Biennale, Japan

• The research included an interview, a film, photographic documentation and text
• Applications for funding

The research project explored an art festival that takes place in the Seto Inland Sea, in Japan, and which effects the festival has on the local communities. The project was initiated and executed by me and fellow architecture student, Inga Skjulhaug, and was sponsored by Toyota Foundation and Dreyers Foundation.

Art installation ‘Mottainai Obake’ in ‘Bwerk exhibition space’

Concept and creation of a spacial art installation conveying the story of a ghost from Japanese folklore known as Mottainai Obake.
Erhvervserfaring

Junior Landscape Architect, SLA Oslo

• Public space and landscaping
• Sketching, research, concept development, visualisations

During my time at SLA I worked on a range of projects that spanned different scales, and different levels of complexity, all in Norway. I worked on a competition for a school in Fredrikstad, a residential zoning plan for a new neighbourhood in Hamrevann and a commercial project in Tønsberg.

CONNECT (コネクト) Kagawa, Japan

• Initial concept for the renovation of a traditional Japanese home
• Implementation of parts of the design
• Communication and intercultural discussions

Along with Inga Skjulhaug, I was hired by a Japanese business specialising in Danish interior design to renovate a traditional Japanese home in a rural context. The project explored cultural links and differences between Japanese and Danish design, architecture and lifestyle. The project was sponsored by 150 year anniversary of diplomatic relations between Denmark and Japan and aimed to increase awareness for sustainability in Japanese building culture.

City Planning, Områdefornyelsen Indre Nørrebro, Copenhagen Municipality

Concept and execution of 3 temporary public installations on Stengade
Facilitation of meetings with local residents
Participation in larger city planning processes

Summer Internship at Zaha Hadid

August 2014 and August 2015