Pop-up link to Video: Presentation Istanbul ISTANBUL POLICY CENTER-SABANCI UNIVERSITY-STIFTUNG MERCATOR INITIATIVE
Mosques in Europe and Turkey Faith and Aesthetics in Public Space
Chair
Nilüfer Göle (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales; Mercator-IPC Senior Fellow)
Panelists
Emre Arolat (Emre Arolat Architects)
Paul Böhm (BÖHM & PTNRS)
Cihan Bugdaci (Gentlemen A.R.T.)
Wednesday, December 18, 2013, 18:30 Istanbul Policy Center
The panel aims to bring together social scientists and architects in order to engage in a comparative discussion regarding mosques. The mosque debate points to a series of sociological issues ranging from the place of faith in public space, the language of the sermon in migrant contexts, and the adaptation of mosques within the European landscape. Mosques represent different meanings according to their size, location, and scale: Invisible prayer rooms, mosques of the neighborhood, or mosques as a new marker of the city. Should mosques in Europe replicate the home countries’ traditional/national styles, or find new vernacular forms? Can mosques be perceived in urban life as a micro public sphere bringing together different publics, both pious and secular, migrant and European? The debates on the aesthetics of transparency, spirituality, and visibility are closely related with the ways in which Islam is reconfigured in space both in Muslim majority and Muslim migrant countries. Several mosque projects in Istanbul, Cologne, and Rotterdam can serve as a point of entry for discussing issues of aesthetics, faith, and publics.
Noble hope
Ergün Erkoçu (architect concept 0031) and Cihan Bugdaci (Gentlemen A.R.T.) approach the social debate on the ‘pluricultural’ society, as a starting point. They prefer to work in difficult areas because they do have the knowledge about the potential of the neighborhoods and it`s residents and know that there is a role for them as social interpreter to play. A conversation about a different way of ‘reading the city’.
We are currently working on the renovation of the Gelderlandschool and the Rosa School in The Hague commisioned by the De Rosaschool (Stichting Katholiek Onderwijs De Zwerm) en De Gelderlandschool (Stichting De Haagse Scholen) partnering Concept0031. The project includes the school buildings as well as the gymnastics buildings of both schools at the Nijkerklaan 5, 7, 9 and 11 in The Hague.
With this renovation it is important to maintain the appearance of the two buildings, with their unique detailing, whilst ensuring that the quality of the school is raised to a sustainable and future-proof building with improved indoor climate.
Feasibility study based on preliminary design for the redevelopment of a former office building at Oosterkerkstraat in Leiden into 45 student apartments.
The building from 1980, currently consists of a basement with 3 floors above. In the new design a laundry room of 20m2, a bicycle storage room and storage are outlined in the basement. On the ground floor 18 student apartments are situated. On the first floor are a common area of about 36 m2 and 18 apartments. And on the second floor another 9 apartments can be realized. All this results in a total of 45 apartments with 12 parking spaces.
PROJECT DETAILS
Project / Location: Leiden Student Housing
Project Type: Redevelopment
Architecture: Concept0031
Variant: Preliminary Design
Feasibility based on: Preliminary Design
The Fatih Mosque in Amsterdam is one of the largest and most visited (sometimes 1100 people at same time) in Holland. The mosque is located in a former Catholic church, which was built on the location where there used to be a Jezuite hiding church. The building is officially listed as monument.
Gentlemen is taking care of the organization and consulting the board of the Mosque on the renovation of the entrance, the layout of the entrance hall and the conversion of stairs to upper houses on the entrance side of the building and the change of the entrance area itself of the monumental Fatih Mosque at the Rozengracht in Amsterdam. Drawings (both architectural as constructive) are made by Concept0031.
Renovation of the “First Dutch Montessori School” in The Hague.
‘An architectural operation’ to renovate this monumental building, with its unique detailing, thereby not affecting its value and at the same time ensuring that the quality of the school is raised to a sustainable and future-proof building with improved indoor climate for the children to learn and play and for the administration and teachers to work.
Credits
Ontwerp: CONCEPT0031 &Gentlemen A.R.T.
Architect: Ergün Erkoçu
Projectmanager: Cihan Buğdacı
Team: Ergün Erkoçu, Cihan Buğdacı & Rowena Oemar
Binckcafé#4:
City Pioneers wanted! Living on a business park
June 15, 2011
About the future of the Binckhorst
As far as the municipality of The Hague is concerned, district Binckhorst will be transformed into a place to live, work and recreate through organic urban development.
In this fourth edition of the Binck Cafe by Stroom The Hague, with moderator Cihan Bugdaci (Director Gentlemen ART) we are looking for opportunities to pioneer on a business park. The municipality wants the Binckhorst to transform into a residential area. Which city pioneer would want to build his dream house here, between concrete plant and car showrooms?
Presentations with inspiring examples from art and architecture show a range of possibilities that the presenting experts and the audience will discuss..led by moderator Cihan Bugdaci.
Link: http://www.stroom.nl/activiteiten/lezing_symposium.php?l_id=8204632
Hotel Transvaal, The Hague
Project Transformation of apartments to Hotel – Paul Krugerlaan, Transvaal in The Hague
Gentlemen A.R.T. was asked to redevelop the project and offer process management transforming existing housing blocks and commercial spaces into a hotel at the Paul Krugerlaan in The Hague, based on a preliminary design by CONCEPT0031.
The existing buildings are property of a private investor for quite some time. An initial study about the feasibility was done early 2011 after the investor invited Gentlemen A.R.T. and Concept0031 because of their expretise.
Gentlemen A.R.T. attended and led a meeting organized by BNA Haaglanden (Union of Dutch Architects) on 14 March 2011, with the theme “New directions for the architect, the attitude of interdisciplinary working’.
At this time of economic crisis, a new generation of architects, is not held by gloomy prospects. There are new networks of architects who create their own missions and initiate their own projects. But also amongst real estate developers the urge is risen to create new groups driven by social and socio-economic issues to add value to projects. There is a new generation hybrid entrepreneurs with a bottom up approach. How do these ‘cooperatives’ work and what can we learn from them? Inspiring speakers from politics, the creative sector, social media platforms and from the urban area are attendant.
Link: http://cms.bna.nl/Nieuws/Agenda/Agendadetail/264/Kring-Haaglanden-Algemene-ledenbijeenkomst-Jaaropening
Faith In The City: The Mosque in the Contemporary Urban West
Keynote lecture and day of debate on 10-11 November 2011, as forum for discussion of ideas and case studies of recent mosque and faith building design from across Europe, alongside a close investigation into historic precedents for the integration of minorities within the urban context and a suggestion of possible progressive future scenarios.
An exploration of the current contemporary moment and a platform for discussion of alternative ways in which architecture can give form to faith and aid in navigating the dynamics between organisations, communities and their neighbours; private practice and the public communication of belief. The seminar sessions looked at architects’ struggles between tradition and modernity in mosque design, the role that architecture can play in integrating faith based minorities, the place of religion in a broadly secular Western urban fabric, and the differences between British, European and other Western contexts.
A collaboration between Openvizor, The Architecture Foundation and Arts Council England’s Arts and Islam programme.
With contributors including
Michel Abboud, architect, Principal of SOMA; architectural consultants for the Park51 Islamic Cultural Centre in New York City, US.
Ergün Erkoçu, architect, author, and Creative Director, Concept 0031 (The Hague) and Cihan Bugdaci, Director,Gentlemen A.R.T. Architects of the Polder Mosque (unrealised) and co-authors of the book The Mosque: Political, Architectural and Social Transformations
Foreign Architects Switzerland, a platform for alternative ideas, projects, and people; responsible for the post-minaret-ban ideas competition for an Islamic Centre in Zurich.
Lukas Feireiss, curator, writer, artist and editor, Studio Lukas Feireiss (Berlin). Editor of Closer To God: Religious Architecture and Sacred Spaces and Beyond Architecture: Imaginative Buildings and Fictional Cities
Alen Jasarevic, architect and founder, Jasarevic Architekten (Mering, Germany); architects of the Penzberg Islamic Forum
Ali Mangera, architect and co-founder, Mangera Yvars Architects (London/Barcelona/Doha); architects of the experimental, un-built and highly contested Abbey Mills Mosque, originally due to be located near the East London’s Olympic site; The North London Cultural Centre, North Harrow (planning permission October 2011) and The Qatar University (on-site development from Winter 2011). Mangera Yvars Architects is an architectural design studio established in 2001 by Ali Mangera and Ada Yvars Bravo, based in Barcelona and London with affiliate offices in Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Doha.
Dr. Noah Nasser, Acting Director, Urban Renaissance Institute, University of Greenwich. Founder, Centre for Urban Design Outreach and Skills (CUDOS), Birmingham City University
Ziauddin Sardar, writer, broadcaster, cultural critic, Visiting Professor, School of Arts, City University, London
Documentary credits Camera by Tijmen Veldhuizen Produced by Abbas Nokhasteh Directed by Andrés Borda González
Ergün Erkoçu (Concept 0031) and Cihan Bugdaci (Gentlemen A.R.T): The Poldermosque – A Pluricultural Reality. At this time the world is changing and ways of looking at things are established through different perspectives; our focus is on three main elements – pluriculturality, interdisciplinary approaches, and informal vs. formal uses. The pluriform-cultural/pluricultural compilation of the community is no longer deniable and therefore an important factor to take into account when talking about or creating for the community. Ergün Erkoçu, architect, author, and Creative Director, Concept 0031 (The Hague) and Cihan Bugdaci, Director,Gentlemen A.R.T. Architects of the Polder Mosque (unrealised) and co-authors of the book The Mosque: Political, Architectural and Social Transformations.