Lenschow & Pihlmann and Mikael Stenström’s Orangery is situated in formal gardens at Gl. Holtegaard Art gallery in the northern part of sealand, Denmark.
Plastic Borromini
In Denmark Lenschow & Pihlmann and Mikael Stenström reinterpreted Borromini’s most famous church in Rome with a steel structure covered in strong plastic.
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- 25 July 2015
- Holte
The Orangery links the Baroque era to our current day in the form of a strong, artistic work that presents itself as a unified whole.
The pavilion is a reinterpretation of one of the most iconic buildings of the Baroque era: the church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane in Rome designed by the architect Francesco Borromini (1599–1667). Borromini used basic geometric shapes, circles and ovals to create a dynamic church space of great beauty. The new orangery in the formal gardens at Gl. Holtegaard takes its point of departure in the floor plan of Borromini’s building.
Resembling a sketch of the original church space, the Orangery consists of a steel structure that has been covered in strong plastic – specifically a type of “shrink wrap” developed to protect cars, boats and other large objects. Inside this space is a living orangery where citrus plants hang from the dome. This reinterpreted orangery fuses a classic shape with our current high-tech world; a world full of materials that are not intended to be beautiful, but purely to meet specific utilitarian needs.
The Orangery, Gl. Holtegaard Art gallery, Holte, Denmark
Program: pavilion
Architects: Lenschow & Pihlmann, Mikael Stenström
Supported by: Statens Kunstfonds Legat- og Projektstøtteudvalg for Arkitektur, Statens Kunstfonds Projektstøtteudvalg for Billedkunst og Det Obelske Familiefond
Collaborative partners: Danish Architects’ Association, HP Masking ApS, Emil Nielsens Smedeværksted, Børge Jakobsen & Søn A/S, Kongevejens Planteskole
Completion: 2015