Inessa Hansch Architecte

Campus de Belval

Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux

CAMPUS DE BELVAL

Inessa Hansch Architecte

ARCHITECT IN CHARGE
Inessa Hansch Architecte

STRUCTURE
Bollinger+Grohmann

LIGHTING
Lavandier & Associés éclairagistes

ENGINEERING CONSULTANT
Icone

STRUCTURE
Bollinger + Grohmann

GENERAL COMPANY
Guy Gardula

PHOTOGRAPHS
Maxime Delvaux

AREA
466.0 m2

YEAR
2018

LOCATION
Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg

CATEGORY
Campus

Text description provided by architect.

Built on a former industrial site of Esch-sur-Alzette, the campus of the University of Luxemburg Faculty of Sciences is laid out over the remains of the old steelworks, dominated by its blast furnaces. Existing facilities are characterized by the minerality of their public spaces which are not very inviting for outdoor activities.

Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux

The site is approached three-dimensionally in response to the monumental scale of the industrial buildings of the former smelter, the density of the campus and the requirements of the program.

Usable structures serving as a belvedere are placed on three sides of the site. Their placement and openness, frame the entrances and encourage pedestrian cross traffic.

Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux

The powerful relations and locations of these public belvedere-supporting aedicules concentrate and distribute campus activities and flows.

They also provide public spaces made available up above, their height corresponding to the concrete platforms of the blast furnaces, raised to 12 meters.

Belvederes, footbridges, arcades, stairs, and alcoves offer a broad range of situations for experiencing the interiors of these structures. Exposed to the climate, lengthwise they create empty, semi-open mezzanine spaces of diverse qualities and uses.

Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux

Their metal frameworks are built with square-section poles lacquered white forming modules 3.60 m x 3.60 m x 3 meters in height.

The generous yet easily identifiable dimension creates a double relationship to scale: the one of the human body and the one of an inhabitable room.

The concrete flooring is an expression the solid materiality of the artificial ground levels and the resin filler elements, lacquered steel guardrail, and stainless steel mesh transform each unit into a qualified and inhabitable space while leaving the stroller out of doors.

Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux


Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux
Campus de Belval
© Maxime Delvaux


Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte
Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte
Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte


Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte
Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte


Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte
Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte
Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte
Campus de Belval
Courtesy of Inessa Hansch Architecte

Inessa Hansch Architecte
T +33 1 43311567
Inessa Hansch Architecte
23 Rue du Renard, 75004 Paris, France