Its structural system is as simple as it is ingenious and Conzett reveals that it was inspired by an unbuilt 1954 project by the Swiss engineer Heinz Hossdorf for a new Ponte del Diavolo, intended for the north side of the Gotthard Pass. The ribbon walkway moves with the wind and requires weight to be stable, which prompted the use of slabs of gneiss that, when stressed and joined together, act as a stable monolithic plate between the two bridge supports. The static type seems a perfect choice for the refined principle of camouflaging light infrastructures in nature explored by Conzett Bronzini and Gartmann since they first established their Chur office in 1999.
The Müllimatt walkway is an efficient response to the demands of the brief and extends between the earthen banks of Brugg like a perfectly proportioned sculpted architectural body.
The architectural object and its morphology immediately reveal how it works: the two concrete pylons simply reach out towards the centre of the river, reducing the distance from one bank to the other. Them stretched between them are two tensioned ribbons of the lightest possible design and materials, suspended over the crystal-clear water of the river.
Francesco Garutti