Peter Haimerl.Architektur

Villa Marteau Concert Hall

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

VILLA MARTEAU CONCERT HALL

Peter Haimerl Architektur

CLIENT
District of Upper Franconia

MANUFACTURERS
Kusser

LEAD ARCHITECT
Peter Haimerl

SITE MANAGEMENT
Hüttner Architekten

CONSTRUCTION UNIT
Firma Gföllner

STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS
aka Ingenieure

ACOUSTICAL CONSULTING
Dr. Eckard Mommertz Müller BBM Planegg

TEAM
Ulrich Pape, Doris Astner, Tomohide Ichikawa, Jutta Görlich et al.

PHOTOGRAPHS
Edward Beierle

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Lichtenberg, Germany

CATEGORY
Concert House

Text description provided by architect.

An underground concert and practice hall has been added to the historic villa of the Haus Marteau music centre in Lichtenberg, Upper Franconia. The shape of the hall was inspired by the area’s former mining tradition.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

Alexander von Humboldt, the famous German naturalist and explorer, even worked here as a master miner before he later became famous for his global expeditions. The room is shaped by 33 large granite “splinters” which direct the sound and ensure perfect acoustics.

THE ENSEMBLE

The Marteau House, a three-storey villa from the 20th century, impresses with its unique structure and striking silhouette. The villa is located in an elegant park, which nestles harmoniously in the gentle hills of its surroundings.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

A few relics of the past, such as the former tennis court, have been transformed back into a grove, and these different layers of time give the overall complex an expressive appearance.

CONVERSION OF THE VILLA

The existing building was only partially restructured at the ground floor and new garden level., The cellar, however, was extended by 60 cm in depth, creating additional room height for a full-fledged floor with space for three additional practice rooms, a lounge, a canteen, and a foyer.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

A newly installed lift also makes the building accessible. The architectural language, as well as the furnishings in this area, are based on the stately architecture of the historic building and continue it in a contemporary manner.

THE EXTENSION

The architect’s intention, when designing the concert hall, was to leave the park and the building largely unchanged. The volume of the expressive, new underground concert hall is integrated into the slope on the south side of the building and the historic ensemble.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

In the gently rolling landscape of the park, it can only be recognised by its two framed openings: stainless steel swords stuck into the hills of the park reflecting the sky, the park and the villa, and marking an entrance.

The view of the listed house and park remains and can be seen from all angles. The hill of the park does not reveal the secret within its monumental interior.

THE NEW HALL

The formal language of the new building picks up on the mining past of the area and transforms the materials formerly mined here, which were often found in crystalline forms, into the architectural.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

The concept of the completely subterranean hall emphasises the tradition of the site and at the same time enriches it with a contemporary, dynamic sculptural approach.

A narrow, sloping, connecting passageway links the two parts of the building, leading down like a tunnel and preparing the walkers for the new concert hall through an intense spatial experience.

The design idea is based on two opposing mountain explosions, which find their architectural realisation in large granite splinters.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

The interior of the New Hall is characterised by 33 large expressive granite splinters, which are studded around a central stage on the walls and ceiling like a solidified explosion. For this purpose, thin granite slabs were mounted on a steel substructure - the largest elements are up to 13 metres long and weigh almost nine tonnes.

The splinter-like, tetrahedron-shaped granite elements define the spatial effect, with a corporeal and moving appearance, and have been placed to model the acoustics of the new hall.

The New Hall is characterised by a central concert stage flanked by two stands arranged in dialogue with one another. Space-defining bodies of granite extend in a sculpturally expressive manner above these two rising spatial elements.

Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle

They dynamise the space around the stage, with their powerful and expressive directionality whilst magically illuminating it through the backlighting of the splinters. At the same time, floating crystalline light bodies illuminate the stage space.


Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
© Edward Beierle


Villa Marteau Concert Hall
Rendering modal By Dr. Wolfgang Hegel 
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
Section 


Villa Marteau Concert Hall
Basement Floor Plan 
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
Ground Floor Plan 
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
Gardan Floor Plan 
Villa Marteau Concert Hall
Site Plan 

Peter Haimerl.Architektur
T +49 89 44760561
Peter Haimerl.Architektur
Lothringer Strasse 13, 81667 München, Germany