PARASITIC OPERATIONS:

- TO INHABIT A CADAVER
Lagoumitzi 15, Aten
Examensarbete, KTH, 2020

             
              

             
              

             
              

Ovan uppifrån och ner:
Studio K middagstid, rendering och  fotografi
Studio K nattetid, rendering och  fotografi

Ovan uppifrån och ner:

Fotografi av Benjamin Tolis, Lagoumitzi 15

Situationsmodell över Aten i skala 1:2000
Förklaring av situationsmodell:
Vitt: platsen för arbetet, Lagoumitzi 15
Blått: “högkultur”, teatrar, operahus,
kulturella centra, museum
Rött: “underjordisk kultur”, burlesque
och drag-shower, squats, gatuevent

“As Gregor Samsa awoke one morning from uneasy dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a gigantic insect. He was laying on his hard, as it were armor-plated, back and when he lifted his head a little he could see his domelike brown belly divided into stiff arched segments on top of which the bed quilt could hardly keep in position and was about to slide off completely. His numerous legs, which were pitifully thin compared to the rest of his bulk, waved helplessly before his eyes.”

Ovan:

Text från Förvandlingen av Franz Kafka

Nedan:
Möter huset, tusch och bläck på akvarellpapper
Öppen studio, tusch och bläck på akvarellpapper
Åsnetrappa, tusch och bläck på akvarellpapper

Entrétrappa, polykroma pennor och blyerts

PARASTIC OPERATIONS: TO INHABIT A CADAVER.
We are in Athens. I feel the scent of Souvlakia and roasted chestnuts, and yesterdays “favva” that all the “yiayiades and papoudes” have prepared for the cats at the doorsteps around Filopappou hill. The old people at the “kafenio” are playing “tavli” while sipping on a small cup of Greek coffee. And around the corner a group of musicians relentlessly beat the drums and create a rhythm that blends in with the noise of the city’s heavy traffic.
   At my way to the university, I take notice of a specific building while walking with my Greek cousin Leonidas. The building draws my attention. Not only because it is abandoned and half-completed, a cadaverous structure like a skeleton, but because its huge walls are shining, impossible to ignore, painted in bright colors by the city’s street artists. Rays of sunlight trickle through the bare concrete structure finding its way to highlight the skillful creations. The colorful graffiti’s flickering in the afternoon dusk makes me curious.
   At first, I thought of the building as an eyesore, a stain on the cityscape, a concrete mass with an unfortunate past and no future, but it grew on me. I could not help myself to fantasize of what it was once meant to become and what it could be in the future.

The site, Lagoumitzi 15. The building that caught my attention during my Erasmus studies in Athens is the skeleton of Lagoumitzi 15. The construction of the building started in 1969 but was halted for unknown reasons. The work was continued in 2008 by architecture firm Potiropoulos D+L, but in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis the finishing of the project was once again put in a deep freeze in 2009. Today, the building belongs to the Greek ministry of education and is intended to become residence for students of Panteion University.
   The building is located close to Acropolis in the cultural district of Koukaki, close to avenue Leoforos Andrea Siggrou, one of Athens main arteries.
   The Syngrou avenue is the main highway that connects the center to the coastal front, and it is well known and prominent for its rich and vibrant cultural scene. Several significant cultural institutions are situated along the avenue’s straight axis. This avenue is not only recognized for its association with “high culture”. Street culture is dominating Leoforos Andrea Syngrou at night. Street techno communities claim public space and turn underpasses to club venues, strip clubs and drag shows turn on their pulsating neon signs, and street artists paint the city, protected by darkness.

An ever-changeing canvas. I call the building Studio K. Studio K is the new epicenter for street art in Athens. The program of the building resonates with its past, since the building, in its original form, has already been covered by artists paintings for decades.
   In fact, the street artform has a strong presence in Greece and a long history. It has been used as a tool of expression during difficult times for centuries, during hardships like the Ottoman occupation, the Nazi occupation, the Civil War, the 1967 military Junta and recently the 2008 financial crisis. Actually, the dire state of the Greek economy in recent years, has strangely enough, fostered the emergence of a thriving artistic scene. A metropolitan city, cheap rents and the fact that Athens is slightly lawless gives it a 90’s Berlin vibe that attracts foreign and national artists to the capital. Street art is huge in Athens. The New York Times calls Athens “one of the continent’s most vibrant and significant cultural capitals” and “a contemporary mecca for street art in Europe”.
   The building of my project, Studio K, expresses the city’s effort to be in the forefront of the advancements of the artform. It hosts workshops, open symposiums and lectures and gives an opportunity for artists in Greece as well as artists abroad to apply for a scholarship in the heart of the metropolis of Athens.
   The building offers massive studios with generous spaces and challenges its tenants to think big and be brave, nothing is too ambitious within these walls.
   Studio K will spearhead the development within the artform, and twice a year the doors will open, welcoming the public, giving an insight of the studios and their cutting-edge work. In addition, the building will give the interested the opportunity to apply for workshops, take part in open symposiums and hand-picked lectures or simply to relax on the rooftop, overlooking the Acropolis.

Ovan:
Fem elevationer av Studio K
Till vänster:

Arbetsmodell 1:50, MDF och svart kartong.

Parasitic method, the crass logic of an intruder. Since I am designing Studio K for a non-conformist group of people, graffiti artists, I choose to approach the project by trying to mimic the parasitic art form that is graffiti in architecture. My ambition is for the building to radiate the same energy as the artform it is devoted to, and its intended users.
   To achieve it, I am working with a parasitic architectural method. I use the book Writing Art and Architecture by philosopher and architect Andrew Benjamin, OneFiveFour by architect Lebbeus Woods and also The Parasite by philosopher Michel Serres as the primary reference literature in this master thesis.
   The form generative parasitic architectural method was originally conceived by Andrew Benjamin and is based on Michel Serres’s “dark organizational theory”. The method warrants the architectural parasite to operate with the same logic as its counterpart in nature. An architectural parasite needs to operate on or in a host and can never exist on its own. While clinging onto its host, it hijacks the host’s water, electricity, and ventilation infrastructure. The parasite frays, it never adds nor ornaments. It creates, by undoing and transforming, thus fraying on edges, lines, and borders of the host, not to compromise the structural integrity of the host’s construction.
   The host’s structure and nature, organizational logic, is pitted against parasitism, and yet, the parasite begins to occupy spaces within the building. This process opens up spaces that were hidden before, turning private space into something new and make sure that separated spaces are now jointed.
   Depth and layering are created because the parasite can work within the whole body of the host, both vertically and horizontally. The parasite, the intruder, nestles its way up through the floors and continues to develop until its anatomy is fulfilled.
   While studying the references, the building concept and more intricate design choices was formed through modelbuilding in different scales. I have worked three-dimensionally with the shapes and spaces and then translated that form into a 3d-digital model and at last created 2d drawings to finalize the design.

Studio K. The building consists of three main parts, the original skeleton-like concrete structure in the middle, the core with vertical communication throughout the building and enclosing façade at the top and finally the parasitic intervention and main communication throughout the open part of the building at the bottom.
   I call the open part at the bottom, Open studio, the enclosed part, the LAB and above the LAB is the rooftop.
   The building structure in black steel, advance from the first step of the entrance and sticks to the host’s concrete static structure. The building staircase, asymmetrically expands, like a gigantic rib cage ascending upwards breaking through several floors and eventually settling culminating in a protruding ledge. As you approach the staircase and walk up the stairs the street follows you, all impression of the city continues, you hear the horns from nearby cars echo between the asymmetrical steel walls and the constructions wings vibrate slightly as a heavy bus passes by. After the first flight of stairs you reach Open studio.
   Open studio is a huge open space, open on all sides towards the surroundings, with concrete slabs above, that gives shade and protection. In a way this space is an extension of the street. It has similar characteristics, a high tolerance threshold, meaning it can withstand exploitation and abuse.
   The staircase continues from first to second and third floor. As the visitor reaches higher, she becomes more and more aware of the city, seeing it through the framework of steel beams. On the third floor and at the end of the staircase the balcony protrudes out of the building, hoovering over the buzzling avenue below. Here people can relax, talk, and enjoy the view in between the many workshops, symposiums, and lectures or ongoing projects.
   At the back of the room of the third floor is the door to ascend further, up the relaxed sloping stairs into the next section of the building: The LAB.
   From this level upwards, the building consists of four identical floors with studios for the scholarship artists. The space is equipped with a network of vast ventilations, silently removing chemical debris and excess moisture. Each studio is generously sized, and in the heart of the plan is a shared common space and vertical communication. Soft and muffled city sounds are barely heard in the LAB, rays of sunlight filter through the perforated extended metal façade and disperses into a soft glow through the transparent floor-to-ceiling polycarbonate panels into the white room.
   The LAB is designed to give the artists a space dedicated to creation. The artists get a focused space where they can work effortlessly and uninterrupted in. To begin with, the studio is completely white painted, welcoming the new tenants.
   The transparent floor-to-ceiling polycarbonate panels let in a soft glow filling the space giving no interrupting stimulus or outside view. Walking into the LAB is like staring at a blank, white paper. There is an urge to fill it, the nothingness is unsettling by itself and it creates the feeling of wanting to create something out of nothing.
   On the seventh floor, as the door slides to the side it feels like walking into a wall of heat. The relaxed sloping steps stairs lead you calmly to the rooftop. The scenery unfolds step by step as the hill of Acropolis emerges, with the extraordinary Parthenon dominating the view hundred meters above the city.
   The rooftop is a vitalizing oasis, a retreat in stark contrast to the LAB and its program, a place for the artists to regain momentum and strength. This is a gathering place for curious and like-minded people, built to bring them together and sit facing each other, a place for loud discussions and events.
   While seated the ridge frames your scene, concealing the view of chaotic Athens below, highlighting the Acropolis surrounded by blue.

På vänstersidan:
Entréplan
Plan 1 (Open studio)
Plan 2 (Open studio)
Plan 3 (Open studio)
Plan 4 (LAB)
Plan 5 (LAB)
Plan 6 (LAB)
Plan 7 (LAB)
Takvåning