Located in the breathtaking Faroese landscape, the 750m² green roofed town hall of Eysturkommuna bridges the river in the village of Norðragøta and unites what used to be two separated municipalities into one.

One almost has to make an effort to make out the Town Hall Eysturkommuna design by Henning Larsen, on the Faroe Islands. Not because the building is not spectacular, but because it understands and respects the distinctive Nordic nature that surrounds it.

“A central theme in traditional Faroese architecture is the blurred line between nature and building, the fact that the spectator has difficulties distinguishing where the landscape ends and the building begins. The primary conceptual idea behind the design of the town hall is driven by the notion of this fleeting line between landscape and building. I believe that could be one way to approach modern Faroese architec- ture,” Ósbjørn Jacobsen, Partner at Henning Larsen.
 

Description of project by Henning Larsen

Discreetly cut into the lush landscape, seemingly floating between the river and the green grass blanket on the roof, the town hall forms the new workplace for the City Council and the administrative staff of the small Eysturkommuna.

Designed by Henning Larsen’s Faroese partner, Osbjørn Jacobsen, who is also the architect behind the award winning concert hall Harpa in Reykjavik, the town hall in Eystur-kommuna pays tribute to the dra- matic Nordic landscape and the traditional way of building, but simultaneously defines a new path for con- temporary Faroese architecture:

“Many contemporary contributions to Faroese architecture directly copy elements from traditional build- ings. I find it much more interesting to look into the underlying thoughts of traditional buildings,” Ósbjørn Jacobsen, Partner at Henning Larsen says.

“A central theme in traditional Faroese architecture is the blurred line between nature and building, the fact that the spectator has difficulties distinguishing where the landscape ends and the building begins. The primary conceptual idea behind the design of the town hall is driven by the notion of this fleeting line between landscape and building. I believe that could be one way to approach modern Faroese architec- ture,” Jacobsen continues.


In the City Council Hall, you clearly senses the closeness to nature and the river, visible through a circular mirror lined glass-covered opening in the floor.

Town Hall Eysturkommuna assumes the important task of establishing a space that will revive the local community. The terraces and roof are open to the public, people can come to have picnics and swim in the river and concerts, talks and exhibitions are hosted inside the building. An exterior sound and light instal- lation of artist Jens Ladekarl Thomsen, drawing from sounds and structures of the local society and na- ture, let passers-by believe that ‘the house speaks’ with its surroundings.

A destination for the local community Before the fishing industry made its entry with a large and important factory, the attractive local beach was the natural gathering point at special occasions. According to plan, the town hall is the first of more buildings to reclaim public life in the center of Norðragøta.

Eysturkommuna covers five different settlements of total 2000 inhabitants.

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Henning Larsen Architects, was founded in 1959 an is an  is an international architecture company with strong Scandinavian roots.

Henning Larsen was born in 1925 in the town of Opsund, Videbæk, in western Denmark and moved with his parents to Bregninge, Zealand, as a child. Henning Larsen graduated from the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, in 1952. He established the company after a study trip to the United States. He started out with only one architecture student among his staff. Today, Henning Larsen Architects is one of Europe’s leading architectural companies. Henning Larsen's life work counts a number of significant building works in Denmark and abroad. He was often described as a "master the light". From 1968 to 1995, he was a professor at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture in Copenhagen.

Henning Larsen received a number of awards and recognitions. Most recently, His Royal Highness the Prince Consort of Denmark's Europe Nostra Award 2013 and in 2012 what is often referred to as the Nobel Prize of art, the Praemium Imperiale. In 2001, he established the Henning Larsen Foundation with the objective of promoting and disseminating architecture in its broad sense.

Among Henning Larsen's most important works abroad, you find the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia, 1984), The Danish Embassy in Riyadh (Saudi Arabia, 1987) and Malmö City Library (Sweden, 1997). In Denmark, his most essential works include Copenhagen Business School Dalgas Have (1989), Enghøj Church (1994), Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek (1996) and the Royal Danish Opera (2004).
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Published on: August 6, 2018
Cite: "A small town hall integrated in the distinctive Faroese nature by Henning Larsen " METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/a-small-town-hall-integrated-distinctive-faroese-nature-henning-larsen> ISSN 1139-6415
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