Pics: A chapel converted into a "modern and stylish apartment"
In the Netherlands a firm called Zecc has taken the chapel of the former Friars of Utrecht (which in the mid 1900's housed 217 friars), moved the remaining elderly thirteen of them to a nursing home, and converted the complex into 40 "modern and stylish" apartments - including the chapel.
The first picture is of the original, and then the adaptations:



From freshome:"The design team chose to keep many of the original features like the high gothic stained glass windows and the original choir organ. To allow more light to enter the space, they cut a Mondrian-inspired glass window into the front of the house facing the street perhaps paying homage to Rietveld’s nearby infamous Schroder House. The entire living area has been whitewashed, while the private spaces above were painted dark. In conclusion this place might be controversial, but it looks very modern and stylish."
Yatzer adds: "The character of the little chapel has been respected and enhanced were possible."
For the very interested, this PDF file contains more pictures and design notes (in Dutch).
To adapt a line from Shakespeare's 73rd Sonnet:
"Modern, Stylish apartments, where once the bare ruin'd choirs stood."
And lest you think this is an isolated phenomenon, The Cool Hunter (in a piece titled "Immaculate Renovations"):
Here at TCH, we’ve been noticing architects around the world are transforming church buildings into various types of structures including houses, retail stores, libraries, and well, cooler churches.I'll let you form a final conclusion, and leave you with this example:
In Maastricht an 800 year old Dominican church was transformed into the newest addition to the Selexyz book store chain – the Selexyz Dominicanen – housing an impressive collection of books not only in Dutch, but in English as well.
The challenge for the Amsterdam based architects Merkx + Girod was staying true to the original character and charm of the church, while also achieving a desirable amount of commercial space. A multi-storey steel structure that houses the majority of the books was constructed and placed along the central nave of the church under the vaulted ceiling.
This, friends, is the architectural facade of creeping materialism. Sometimes beautiful, always deadly.
blogback: "The resulting whited sepulcher is indicative of the state of the Church in the Netherlands." - Will CubbedgeLabels: european affairs, secularism, world trends



































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