Reclaiming the Abandoned

Navn
Davíð Georg Gunnarsson
Uddannelsesgrad
Kandidat
Fagfelt
Arkitektur
Institut
Bygningskunst og Design
Program
Spatial Design
År
2022

Lately, there has been a slow realization among Icelanders that trees can grow in the country's once treeless land. The project is a transformation of a deserted woodland farm into a forestry workshop, expanding the usage of a proliferating resource.

Moreover, it embodies the reuse of old structures with the ambition to establish a healthier relationship between the built environment and nature.

Forestry in Iceland has been proliferating since afforestation started in the country between 1950-1980, reaching a high of about 6 million seedlings per year from 2007-to 2009. Today the forests need thinning, and timber sales of Icelandic wood have become a reality not many could have imagined a few decades ago. However, a large percentage of the resources are ‘chips’ and ‘fuelwood.’ Therefore, a potential is to exemplify how these can be used in a more sustainable matter such as wood production.

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Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
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Site aerial
Section A-A 1:250
North façade
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The unexpected
Plan 1:50
Silhouette enhancement
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Circular approach
Image of the original farm at Stálpastaðir from 1963
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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