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VISITOR CENTRE Heidelberg Castle

VISITOR CENTRE Heidelberg Castle

Heidelberg Castle ranks as one of the most important Renaissance buildings north of the Alps. Having been partially destroyed during the Thirty Years’ War, and on many occasions since, the castle was abandoned altogether in the eighteenth century.


Today the famous ruin serves as a museum. Receiving more than one million visitors a year, it is one of the country’s top tourist destinations and makes a lasting impression on international tourists visiting Germany.


The purpose of the visitor centre is to familiarize guests with the castle before they proceed to the castle proper. The visitor centre showcases the castle’s history as well as orientating guests so as to ensure a trouble-free visit. In May 2009, Max Dudler’s design prevailed in the architectural selection procedure. The visitor centre’s foundation stone was laid in summer 2010, making it the first new building to be constructed at Heidelberg Castle for more than four hundred years. This building shows how the contemporary architecture of Max Dudler is rooted in history. At the same time, its abstract form underscores both the grandeur and actuality of this German cultural monument.


The new building is situated outside the old defensive ring wall, at the entrance gate to the castle and garden (Hortus Palatinus).


The narrow strip of land chosen for the new structure lies between a small garden house and a saddle store built in the reign of Frederick V. The building backs onto a seventeenth century retaining wall which shores up the park terraces above. With its building lines following those of its neighbours, the sculpturally designed visitor centre structurally completes this small ensemble of buildings in the forecourt area.


In architectural terms, the building blends in with the surrounding historical fortifications through its re-interpretation of elements of the existing site’s architecture. The window embrasures, for example, are set more than two metres into its walls, echoing the large-sized apertures that can be seen in the neighbouring saddle store. The windows of the visitor centre are positioned according to the building’s interior requirements and also offer visitors new visual relationships with the entry building and garden outside. The popular Elisabeth Gate in particular can be seen from many parts of the interior. The façade’s deeply-set embrasures are made possible because of the special layout of the building: the broad expanse of its exterior walls hide a number of small side rooms and a stairwell. Like pockets (French: poches), these interior recesses offer space for display cabinets, shelves and seating areas, while the centre of the narrow building remains open.


For the façade, local Neckar Valley sandstone has been machine-cut to form a monolithic wall of roughly-cut blocks with joins that are barely visible. This masonry detailing is a contemporary re-interpretation of the historical retaining wall, with its hand-cut, undressed stonework. Unlike the heavy relief of the building’s exterior, the surfaces of its interior are smooth. The large window panes are fitted flush with the white plastered walls, as are the lighting panels set into the white plastered ceilings. The floor consists of a light blue polished terrazzo. All the fixtures and fittings in the recesses, as well as the doors and other furnishings are made of cherry wood.


Ensuring a smooth flow of large numbers of visitors was a particular challenge posed by the architectural brief. Dudler’s design solves this with its ingenious ‘architectural promenade’ through the building: visitors proceed from the entry hall through to the educational room, then up onto the roof terrace with its elevated views of the castle before exiting via the exterior stairs at the rear of the building to begin a tour of the castle proper. In this way, the full potential of this small building is realised, ensuring it has both multi-purpose usage and allows the maximum throughput of visitors.

Il castello di Heidelberg, Heidelberg

Il castello di Heidelberg, Heidelberg

Il castello di Heidelberg è una delle antiche rovine più famose della Germania e ospita ogni anno un milione di visitatori. Fino alla distruzione da parte dei soldati di Luigi XIV nella Guerra di successione del Palatinato (fra il 1688 e il 1697), che lo incendiarono e lo fecero esplodere, fungeva da residenza dei principi elettori del Palatinato. Da allora il complesso architettonico citato per la prima volta nel XIII secolo è stato ristrutturato solo parzialmente.

Dopo svariati secoli di giacenza delle rovine, la conversione della camera delle selle del castello rappresenta un evento storico-architettonico. “La camera delle selle si è risvegliata sotto una nuova luce”, ha titolato il quotidiano locale Rhein-Neckar-Zeitung. Facente originariamente parte delle opere di fortificazione e utilizzata dopo la Guerra dei Trent’anni come stalla e rimessa per le carrozze, la camera delle selle è stata ora trasformata in modo consono in un bistrò con 50 posti a sedere. L’illuminazione viene fornita da apparecchi per interni BEGA.

Gli architetti dello studio Max Dudler hanno voluto che lo spazio risultasse nuovamente fruibile nelle sue dimensioni originarie, con un’altezza di 7,50 metri. La volta a botte esistente è stata restaurata e negli archi a tutto sesto sono state inserite delle vetrate fisse con porte d’ingresso.

L’allestimento interno è realizzato con pochi materiali selezionati: il pavimento è costituito da piastrelle in pietra naturale e il soffitto presenta un controsoffitto acustico. Tutte le installazioni e le porte sono realizzate in ciliegio nero.

Il suggestivo aspetto estetico della sala viene rafforzato da apparecchi a sospensione BEGA. Gli elementi luminosi dimmerabili alti 80 centimetri forniscono un’uniforme luce a fascio libero e si caratterizzano per le proporzioni perfette. I cilindri sono costituiti da vetri opali soffiati a tre strati, nei quali è presente uno strato opale estremamente sottile, fuso fra due strati di vetro cristallo. Il vetro opacizzato ad alta trasparenza distribuisce la luce in modo molto uniforme.

In questo sito di Heidelberg vengono impiegate versioni speciali dei nostri apparecchi a sospensione, nei quali sono inseriti cavi di allacciamento e rosoni a soffitto di colore nero, per indirizzare l’attenzione dell’osservatore completamente sulla volta e sull’illuminazione brillante del bistrò.

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