IntCDC – Groundbreaking of Wangen Pavilion and Tower

Groundbreaking Ceremony for Hybrid Flax Pavilion and Wangen Tower

January 30, 2024 /
IntCDC, Landesgartenschau Wangen im Allgäu

A. Menges (ICD), J. Knippers (ITKE)
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[Picture: IntCDC University of Stuttgart, Julia Mederus]

 

 

In the left excavator: Harald Sievers, District Administrator of the District of Ravensburg, in the right excavator: Michael Lang, Lord Mayor of the district town of Wangen, in the centre with scarf: Prof. Jan Knippers and Monika Göbel, University of Stuttgart. Also: Supervisory Board and management of the Landesgartenschau Wangen.

Landesgartenschau 2024 Wangen im Allgäu

The symbolic ground-breaking ceremony for the Hybrid Flax Pavilion and the Wangen Tower on the site of the Landesgartenschau 2024 in Wangen im Allgäu on Tuesday 30 January 2024 marked the official start of construction for two outstanding projects. 

The Hybrid Flax Pavilion demonstrates a renewable, resource-efficient alternative to conventional construction methods and is therefore an important milestone towards sustainability in construction. “This pavilion is the first building in the world to use natural fibres in this way,” said Professor Jan Knippers, Head of the Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design at the University of Stuttgart. The flax construction, which is produced using a computer-aided winding process, reinforces a thin timber panel and gives the building its characteristic curved silhouette.

Foundation Hybrid Flax Pavilion

With an impressive height of around 22 meters, the Wangen Tower offers a breathtaking panoramic view over the Allgäu region and will remain at the site as a permanent attraction even after the Landesgartenschau has finished. It is the world's first accessible observation tower to use curved components that transform autonomously into the final, programmed curved shapes by the wood's characteristic shrinking during a decrease of moisture content.

Foundation Wangen Tower

Both buildings are the result of many years of research by the Cluster of Excellence Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture (IntCDC), led by Professor Achim Menges, Head of the Institute for Computational Design and Construction, and Professor Jan Knippers, Head of the Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design at the University of Stuttgart. In the spirit of two-way knowledge transfer between cutting-edge research and construction companies, the buildings will be realized in cooperation with companies based in the region.

 

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