CITROËN YSER FUTURE MOBILITY Luuk van den Elzen
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CITROËN YSER FUTURE MOBILITY
Graduation Studio: “From Industrial Site to Cultural Identity” February 2016 - January 2017 Master Architecture, Building & Planning Eindhoven University of Technology
Author: Luuk G.P. van den Elzen
Graduation Committee: prof. ir. D. Gianotten ir. M.H.P.M. Willems ir. arch. B.C.I.M. Kuit
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[3] Citroen Yser Brussels
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ABSTRACT On the other side of Brussels’ canal rises a
Citroën Yser Brussels is an architectural
Nevertheless, in the end, it is just a car plant.
beacon of light. The tower is coming alive.
example of expressing corporate identity. In
It may be a beautiful car plant, but it remains
Inside the hall, the racing-driver makes his last
the case of Citroen: an identity of innovation
inaccessible to the public.
circuit around the track. The mechanic turns
and progress. The architecture matches the
the last nut on the latest electric prototype. The
ambition of the car maker. Architecture and
‘The Future Mobility Center’ is a new kind of
CTO is rounding off the E-Hybrid and Fuel Cell
cars met.
institution that creates the opportunity for
Electric Vehicle Congress. The visitors watch
different levels of stakeholders to exchange and
the final part of the Future Mobility exhibition.
Since the beginning of the modern era there
gain knowledge in Research & Development
The students have just finished their graduation
has been a strong relationship between cars and
and production in the field of Future Mobility,
project on a car that runs on formic acid. Once
architecture, especially in work of Le Corbusier.
and so enable society to connect with and enjoy
in the tower, they all meet up for a drink in the
As a result, architects today, are fascinated by
the future of mobility. The design presents itself
top of the tower, and a look out over Brussels, to
cars.
as part of both worlds, and represents an image
see what needs to be done to realise the dream they share.
of prospective mobility. The overall aim is to This thesis questions the future of urban
come ever closer to our aim to make electric
manufacturing, while facilitating architecture
and autonomous mobility part of our everyday
Mobility has become a global phenomenon. It
to allow people to experience and see Future
lives.
has left a permanent mark on human history.
Mobility. This combination is contributing
The car has defined us as individuals and has
to shaping that future. Hence the challenging
The building has been designed to celebrate the
outlined our built-up environment. The car
question: How can a new mobility institution
opportunities in the future of mobility that lie
is the transport mode of choice. The future of
provide space for urban manufacturing such
ahead of us. In the age of light, this is a stepping
mobility now seems to be autonomous and
that the public can experience the future of
stone to a brighter future. A future the students
electric. For the sake of the environment? We
mobility?
and visitors look out on as they share a toast to
are seeing more and more electric cars on the
the Future Mobility Center.
road. Why? The reason is no longer simply
Case studies of architecture and cars have
environment related. The arguments being
revealed an attraction in the architecture
given come from a range of emotional desires,
represented by the buildings in which they
including love and enthusiasm. And owners are
are manufactured. They have become an
visibly excited about their electric cars.
essential image for the future: part of society.
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[3] Concept
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PREFACE
Six years ago, I began my studies in the
these buildings into the cultural buildings of
The transformation thesis, under the name
Department of the Built Environment, at
the future; the transformation from highly
‘From Citroën Yser to Future Mobility’ reflects
Eindhoven University of Technology (TU/e).
protected industrial space into highly public
the ability of the current trends in automotive
One of the first things we were told us was that
cultural space. The studio offered me the chance
mobility to convince the public that this is the
we were going to be the generation of architects
to explore this vision further.
way forward. This is also portrayed in the design
who would no longer design and build
of the Future Mobility Center in Brussels. My
new buildings. We would occupy ourselves
Transformation is probably still one of the most
hope now is that this publication will be read
purely with transformation and preservation
imperative subjects in practicing architecture.
with as much excitement as I have experienced
projects. This was the future portrayed by our
In a way, my lecturers were right. In becoming
during the researching, designing and writing
lecturers. And here I find myself again, in my
the new architects of tomorrow, we have to
of it.
graduation project, ready to carry out one such
take our responsibilities with respect to our
transformation.
industrial built environment. This has been
Luuk van den Elzen
a common thread throughout my years in at
Eindhoven, December 2016
The studio ‘Transformation: from Industrial site
TU/e. And it has, therefore, been particularly
to Cultural identity’ investigates the qualities
fulfilling to continue developing this theme in
and challenges of industrial buildings, and
my graduation project.
identifies the possibilities of transforming
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[6]
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READING GUIDE The studio ‘Transformation - from Industrial to
overview a mapping exercise into the cities
relation to the history of the hardware, however
Cultural Identity’ was divided in two parts: one
of the abandoned projects was conducted.
with the future in mind. Part two further
is the joint research phase with the whole studio
Simultaneously we explored the data of five
examines the question of programming a Future
taking part, for the first three months and one
different cities in Europe, comparing them with
Mobility Center which is translated into the
individual part where we focused on our own
the project cities. The data found contained:
central design question.
research and design. The joint research phase is
population, age structure, religion, economy,
represented in a separate M3 research book.
cultural program, nationality, tourism, weather,
Part 3 explains the process of the final
and etcetera. The research book concludes by
design, design decisions taken regarding
M3 Research book portrays the joint research,
comparing all research done between Europe,
the organization and representation of the
an investigation into the trend of architectural
Asia and America.
undertaking of the transformation. Furthermore part three contains the relation between, the
transformations in a cultural context and its effect on the phenomena of identity, in a strong
This graduation rapport contains the individual
relation with the city. As well an investigation
research and design and is divided in five parts.
theoretical research and the design. Part 4 displays the result the design using
into abandoned sites and their immediate surroundings and their relation with the city.
Part
1
The research was divided into Europe, Asia and
transformation
America. The investigation into architectural
examines the relation between architecture, cars
transformations resulted in a complete overview
and architecture in a historical perspective, and
of transformed buildings/sites in Europe. In
conducts a typological research into architecture
Part 5 contains all consulted and used literature,
addition to the overview we produced several
and cars. As well as the history of CitroĂŤn,
notes, illustrations, images and drawings.
timelines on different scales (Europe, city and
the initiator of the building. Along with this
project) to compare the projects in the context
investigation into the culture of e-mobility. This
of the European history and their immediate
results in the aim of designing a Future Mobility
context.
Center.
The second part contains an examination into
Part 2 describes the chosen building and
abandoned sites in Europe. In addition to this
motivates this choice in a historical context, in
explains and
my
approach
cultural
towards
identity.
It
situation, three-dimensional drawings, floor plans, sections, elevations and visualizations, and contains the conclusion on the thesis.
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PART ONE
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Research - transformation & industrial heritage - cultural identity
PART TWO
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Inquiry 21 25
historical research - Citroën yser
location - Brussels - Citroën yser
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construction of cars
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programming a future mobility center
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- inquiry into the program - constructing a track
129 134
27 mobility research - mobility in the near future - e-mobility theoretical research - le corbusier and the car typological research - lingotto factory - unité d’habitation - renault centre - bmw central building - gm technical center
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51 61
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TABLE OF CONTENTS PART THREE
137
Design the problem statement research question
PART FOUR
167
Results 139 139
design process
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future mobility center - transformation - elements - functions - track - walkway - production & labs - urban - total - tower & roof - diagrams
153 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164
visualization
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situation axonometric views plans elevation
174 176 180 186
track tower window into the future conference center research & development showroom
188 194 204 212 218 224
reflection | conclusion acknowledgements
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PART FIVE
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Sources
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INTRODUCTION
Window into the future
building in Brussels, which led to a desire to
decided to leave the structure in 2017. The
This thesis is the result of a 12-month graduation
design a Future Mobility Center. The research
Future Mobility Center aims to deal with the
project in the faculty of Architectural, Design
started with an exploration of how e-mobility is
transformation of the building following the
and Engineering at the TU/e. It has been
interwoven in society, and how society is facing
company’s departure. The solutions for this
produced under the guidance of Professor Ir.
this new phenomenon. An expedition into
transformation have been found in the history
David Gianotten, Ir. Maarten Willems and
mobility, connectivity, and community, heading
of its owner, in specific context qualities and in
Ir. Arch. Barbara Kuit. The aim of this thesis
towards the future. Allowing the public to have
the hardware, to revolutionise this building into
is to question what architecture itself can do
a ‘Window into the future’.
a capitalist cultural destination that facilitates
to improve and strengthen societal attitudes towards our Future Mobility.
an architecture which, in turn, will promote a Citroën built its prime location outside France
change in thought towards our mobility in the
in 1933, in Brussels, just on the outskirts
near future.
The research started with an exploration into
of the city centre. After almost 100 years of
Transformation and Cultural Identity. This was
urban expansion, the building is now located
followed by a detailed study of the Citroën Yser
in the heart of the capital of Europe. Citroën
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PA RT O N E TH E R E S E A RC H
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PA RT O N E TR A N S FO R M AT IO N & C U LTU R A L I D E N T I T Y
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Wrapping
Jux taposition
Superimposing
Weaving
Inser ting
[8] Methods of achieving links bet ween old and new- Franรงoise Astorg Bollack
Transformation
“Industrial
sites
are
the
visible
three-
new program while maintaining some of this
and negative. How can we deal with such a
dimensional record of our life on earth” the
heritage/history? Because as architects we could
feeling without transforming or turning it into
industrial sites we are aiming to transform into
see architectural value in for example large
a monument?
a cultural identity. We cannot keep everything
steel structures or gigantic spaces that lost it
and we cannot demolish everything. By
functional need, while the public just portrays
Usually the adaptation of an industrial site
adding and removing we aim to keep the three
is as an abandoned industrial building, maybe
ensures its conservation. Nevertheless, new
dimensional record and a history and aim for
even with a negative feeling towards it. Discover
uses should respect the significant material and
a cultural boost. Bollack divides approaches
the industrial sites, where the essence of the
maintain some original patterns. Because, the
for transforming sites and adaptive reuse of
design was on functional space rather than an
buildings and structures, built for industrial
buildings into five categories.
aesthetic one.
activities were of fundamental importance.
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They should be studied, their history should be In addition to an approach, part of this
However, in the Post War Architectural time a
seen and their meaning and significance put on
approach is the attitude toward history in the
building or site acquired a deeper and emotional
display. That should be the attitude towards old
approach of abandoned industrial heritage.
value when a building or the built environment
buildings, to use their history, context, and the
How to deal with history. And the dependency
became part of a significant event in history,
building itself, as a design generator.
of history for the success of the site. Van Schaik
like WWII. This value could both be positive
argues in her essay about this, using Strijp-S as a case study. “Is it true that the success of Strijp-S is not only stimulated, but actually dependent on the history of the area?” She states: “I cannot blame the municipality for using history to attract people to its city, but I can blame the architects for designing in a way that is dependent on this history, because its attractiveness is not guaranteed to stay”.2 How can we do more than play along with trends on industrial looks? As architects we should be able
Original structures would not have been perceived as ‘architecture’ or they simply would not have been noticed, but their integration into a contemporary assemblage propels them onto a new stage.3 Françoise Astorg Bollack
to analyse industrial heritage on its possibilities in a smarter way, surprising designs could be ‘discovered’ and interesting spaces could be created. Even structures that would normally be ignored by the public. “Original structures would not have been perceived as ‘architecture’ or they simply would not have been noticed, but their integration into a contemporary assemblage propels them onto a new stage”.2 How could the view of the public change of a dismissed industrial site? And by changing the view, attract the people to a site with a
Abandoned industrial space has become art’s default preference. (…) Added elements should to my believe not be juxtaposed, to the existing, but should rather be an integrated part of the whole, as a continuation of the historic layers. In this way, the meaning of the place for the humans can be enhanced.4 Rem Koolhaas
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Industrial heritage?
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The industrial heritage is the evidence of activities which had and continue to have profound historical consequences.5
Industrial heritage refers to the physical remains of the history of technology and industry.6
Industrieel erfgoed is geen kwestie van definiĂŤren, we kijken liever naar het draagvlak binnen de gemeente en haar burgers waar het monument zich bevindt.7
The industrial heritage is of social value as part of the record of the lives of ordinary men and women, and as such it provides an important sense of identity.8
Alle materiĂŤle sporen van de industriĂŤle maatschappij.9
Industrial heritage consists of the remains of industrial culture which are of historical, technological, social, architectural or scientific value.10
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[9] Absorbing Modernit y, 2014 Venice Biennale
Cultural Identity
We expect culture shocks everywhere we go,
be researched in literature as well in a spatial
Thus, the architecture of today represents a
whether is on the other side of the Netherlands
study.
globalized identity. How this globalized identity
or on the other side of the world. But the western
is become the style of our buildings all over the
world is globalized and expanding. In society,
Reconsideration of our relationship to nature,
globe. How can I examine how people identify
architectural plays a role. The phenomena
our relationship to commercial stuff, to the
themselves with a building that in the end
of (cultural) identity is a key element in
city, the junk around us, most important, the
represents their culture?
architecture. We ask ourselves what concerns an
relationship with our past. Marcel Duchamp
individual, influenced by society, what concerns
argued that the Emergence of Pop Art, the
For example, Neutelings Riedijk aims to give
an entire society - culture? Everything, and
artist’s role as a social critic. In this shift the
identity to the communities that will use their
everyone is always exposed to - and influenced
cultural identity in buildings is different than
public buildings. This is quite a substantial claim.
by some level of culture, in the same way that
the absorbing modernity discussed before. In
Is it ethically justifiable that architects have this
culture is always exposed to - and influenced by
this particular case people started to occupy
sort of power? And how are they using it to let
everything and everyone.
abandoned/empty buildings in the city. The
the public in on their buildings. Further on I
buildings itself were playing an important part in
want to do an exploration of building functions
the
the new visual culture; they too became the stuff
that contribute to the identity of a place and
Architecture Biennale in Venice with a few of
of art production. Site specific performances,
are a positive intervention of a possible rather
my friends in architecture. We came across the
happenings, dance events used buildings as
negative abandoned site.
exposition Absorbing modernity, the theme
active participants. The building as a stage.
In
two
thousand
fourteenI
visited
for the National pavilions, explained in the following section. If you look at these juxtaposed images, part of the theme ‘Absorbing modernity’, one may wonder where our identity expressed in our built environment has remained. However, this worldwide indication of globalization on architecture concerns the phenomena ‘identity’ and ‘representation’. The architecture of today represents a globalized identity. A generic presence. Nevertheless, identity and representation are two fundamental factors of architecture. Especially when people identify themselves through a building of culture and that possibly should represent their culture?! What is the building communicating, what is it representing, the representation of an identity? A site or building is open for multiple interpretations, how is architecture enable to engage people to history and culture? This could
Absorbing Modernity 1914-2014 Absorbing Modernity 1914-2014 is an invitation to the national pavilions to show, each in their own way, the process of the erasure of national characteristics in architecture in favour of the almost universal adoption of a single modern language and a single repertoire of typologies – a more complex process than we typically recognize, involving significant encounters between cultures, technical inventions, and hidden ways of remaining ‘national’.11
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PA RT O N E CI TR O Ë N
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[11] André Citroën [12] Citroën Trac tion Avant [13] Citroën Trac tion Avant
Citroën
Citroën
urban tissue, interesting in more ways than one.
1905 and resumed in 1926 on plans by architect
The complex built in 1933-1934 was one of the
Albert van Huffet, to be completed in 1970).
In the early twenties, André Citroën had laid
largest most modern garages in Europe before
the solid foundation of a national network
World War II. It traces back to the inspiration
Workshops, containing the parts warehouses,
of branches and garages. Following his own
that pushed the construction of the Eiffel Tower
service station and offices were located in
logic, he created the Architecture Department
in Paris.
the other wing on the northeast side. They were located in a large rectangular hall, 103
of Citroën to erect buildings to match its ambitions. It is exactly in Brussels that he
The exhibition hall, a cathedral dedicated to
by 130 meters long by an equally impressive
wanted to establish its first subsidiary outside
the cult of the automobile, measuring 76 by 17
architecture. The internal structure of this large
France.
meters, was originally a free vault height of 25
threes sided glass space are made of riveted
meters. In the original design, the shaped cocoon
metal structure, which is the work of genuine
or comet reflected the advanced technology
specialists and are supported by an assembly of
that characterizes the brand. It consisted of a
steel columns.
Citroën Yser Brussels La Société Belge des Automobiles Citroën
monumental bay window occupying the whole
(SBAC) was formed Thursday, January 31, 1924.
southwest side, overlooking La Place d’Yser
The exterior is characterized by large glass
The offices with workshops, with an area of 2500
panels framed in rectangular shaped frame
m², were located at Rue the L’Amazonie 47-51
painted brown that give it a smooth, cold look,
in the Saint-Gilles neighbourhood in Brussels. In 1926, it was the acquisition of the building at Usines de Forest at la rue de Saint-Denis with buildings covering around 6,630 m². Then acquired the grand exhibition store at Boulevard
The exhibition hall, a cathedral dedicated to the cult of the automobile
which is a reply to the whole the nave shaped showroom. The access for vehicles was through three entrances, each facing one of the three streets bounding the building.
Adolphe Max, a prestigious address in the city
This set of modernist steel and glass without
centre. At that time, the workshops of the SBAC
any decoration is a monumental witness to the
were divided between La rue Emile Claus and
and ended in apse of glass, facing downtown.
functionalist logic of industrial architecture.
La rue du Compass, five kilometres apart.
The original building was a reminiscent of the
It was designed by two Belgian architects
early Roman basilicas. The two brick sections of
Alexis Dumont (1877-1962) and Marcel Van
In the early thirties, the head of Citroen bought
wall were coated with clear paint. At nightfall,
Goethem, in collaboration with the French
large plots of land near the site of La Place de
an indirect lighting flooded with soft light and
architect Jacques Maurice-Ravazé (1885-1945),
l’Yser (IJzerplein) of an old fill dock. Very close
well-lit this majestic volume where the cars
chief architect of the Architecture Department
to the centre of Brussels. The building that will
were parked on the white and black tiles, a
of the Citroën who was also the creator of the
be erected steals the title of “Europe’s biggest
checkerboard. The daytime show, when sunlight
Citroën to Lyon in 1932.
service station” from Citroën Lyon, built in
flooded the nave should not be less grandiose.
1932, it only had the title for two years.
The air of this piece was to cause major
Dumont and Van Goethem realized a series of
problems, which will in the medium term lead
Art Deco buildings in Brussels, including the
to substantial transformation of the hall.
buildings of the University of Brussels (ULB) on
This Citroën Yser building, visible from
the Boulevard de Waterloo near the Porte de Hal
a large distance and with great access and with an outstanding architecture. This huge
The main entrance of the exhibition hall was on
(A. Dumont, 1924 -1932), the School of Arts and
functionalist building covered an area of
the side of the wide boulevard, up towards the
Crafts, Boulevard de l’Abattoir (Dumont, 1926-
16,500m2, occupying almost a full block in the
Basilica of Koekelberg (construction started in
1933), the Shell Building (Dumont, 1931-1934),
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[14] Citroën Yser from Place de l’ Yser [15] Citroën Yser from Quai de Willebroeck
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[16] Entrance CitroĂŤn Yser at Quai de Willebroeck [17] Corner Quai de Willebroeck & Ruimingskaai
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[18] CitroĂŤn Yser Brussels
the General Insurance Trieste, Rue Ravenstein
of 5 meters above the ground, creating a closed
overall architecture. Then calculate the support.
(Dumont and Van Goethem, 1934-1935) and
exhibition space on the ground floor, preventing
Naturally opt for the works of Le Corbusier,
the Ravenstein Galleries (1954).
any view of the nave in the ‘cathedral’.
the way to build fast, lighter and cover large areas with steel, concrete, glass. The trusses
In this uncanny setting with a brightness
Then in the seventies, concrete slabs were
of the metal frame are manufactured in the
without limits where the latest technical
inserted, subdividing this gigantic space in
workshop, bolted and riveted in advance. They
innovations are used to the best, the lack of
multiple floors, banal ruined to save space for
are attached one after the other as playing cards
heat-insulating glazing in the mid-thirties has
the purpose of storing cars. The exterior was
that are recovering, on a concrete base, on a grid
many disadvantages: a lot of heat generation
fitted with a visible sheet of metal cladding
that will support the pillars. Every truss is then
in the summer periods in contrast with the
on the top, covering the concrete, the vertical
difficulties to maintain a satisfying climate
pillars painted in s light colour.
during cold periods. The workshop workers were not happy to work every day in these now
In the late 20
legendary places.
and ecological considerations lead to the
th
century, the economic
replacement of the huge single glass windows
Much of the charm of this ‘ship’ has now been disappeared, but the buildings are still there
The ensemble fits perfectly into the Zeitgeist
by heat insulating glass, unfortunately requiring
of the thirties - when, in the metropolises,
thicker frames. The whole façade including
the car was presented to the public in caskets.
vertical pillars is as dress up with white panels
It is a perfect model of the preferred designs
accentuated by red markings of the identity
bolted to its neighbour. While one team raises
by designers from the interwar period. The
of Citroën. With these thickened lines the
the windows in standardized and prefabricated
exhibition hall was often the scene of worldly
lightness of the original design is lost and in this
frames, another team fills the spaces between
configuration, the “hat” of the building seems
the beams with brick walls and a third laying
to be lost. Much of the charm of this “ship” has
the paving of the ground. Then the interiors are
now been disappeared, but the buildings are still
installed at night. Three more weeks and the
there.
building is completed, ready for operation.
The Citroën building on Yser is a contemporary
Today, at the Place de l’Yser, everything
architectural monument of the mid nineteen
remained. The walls of brick from 1933 are
thirties, featuring architectural designs of the
there, so are the metal stairs and railings. The
The exhibition hall was often the scene of worldly and popular presentations
interwar period, it is located in an area rich
wires of steel always run straight through the
and popular presentations: the Traction Avant
in heritage of this period. Its dimensions, its
metal pipes with precise dimension. Lampposts,
and much later the Citroën ID, DS; it attracted
historical, aesthetic and architectural features,
shapes as an inverted bowl mounted on the wall
large crowds, sometimes requiring the use of
its high visibility and recognition by the public,
are still operational. The clock unmarked and
police forces to organize the flow of people.
the whole Citroën building is a major part of
without figures that closely resembles the clock
Brussels’ cityscape.
of the Grand hall Parisian (Brillié manufactured)
Evolution of the building
counting up the minutes in a discreet click of Current state
needle movement by an electrical mechanism.
in the same way, neither outside nor inside. A
The construction principle is exactly the same
The sun filters through the canopy and falls
false ceiling was quickly constructed at a height
as that of the Quai de Javel. First define the
naturally in the repair shops blending with the
At present, the huge volume no longer appears
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[19] Gas station [20] Workshop
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[21] La Salle de L’exhibition
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[22] Citroën Trac tion Avant [23] Citroën DS [24] Tesla Model S
dust and forming a halo like a heavenly prayer.
The ship has no captain, the spirit is gone. Do
and broke down every other time but it was the
It fails to illuminate dark corners because of the
not touch anything. Let’s not clean anything.
excitement that this new thing brought to the
modern additions, structures and equipment.
The past is sleeping under the dust, which is
people.
Here hovers a mystery fog.
maybe the best we can do to protect it.
The sun filters through the canopy and falls naturally in the repair shops blending with the dust and forming a halo, like a heavenly prayer
That is where the brand stands today. Today it is less of a dream in the building, instead we sell. You can dream for hours, in our heads, we have
They need to give you a glimpse of the future
the image, with shining cars from 1934, in this impeccable organization.
Car manufacturers seem to have forgotten how to dream. Is this the best car ever? We
Tesla (modern day Citroën)
do not know yet. But Musk knows what other manufacturers have forgotten in their pursuit
“Two minutes after Blik had parked it in front
of higher profits or averting their destruction:
of an elementary school, there were a dozen
cars should seduce. They need to give you a
little boys surrounding the car. The youngest of
glimpse of the future. “They need to shake the
the bunch asked if this was the latest Audi, the
inner child in you. The Model X does this like
If he were still there, the boss would order in
group gave him a derisive snort.” “Of course not
no other. Making it ‘De Snoek van onze tijd’ ”.13
a quiet tone and unanswerable, to scratch off
man, it is the new Tesla Model X. With falcon
the stained soils of rubber and oil, clean the
wing doors. Awesome! Can they open?”12
windows, dust off each steel bar and give it a new layer of brown paint. But the war is over. With it slowly came a progress that was not expected. Not the continuity of the ideas of the thirties that were to bring more comfort, space, freedom, light, on the contrary, a progress came that breaks with the past, denies it, is ashamed of it and replaces it with consumption, the colour, the futile, which exalts itself, which destroys everything
Elon Musk knows how to brings boys into ecstasy. His Tesla Model X is what new cars used to be: full of features that you want to test
in its path, and the history. The steel and glass cathedral was filled by floors that now serve
Elon Musk knows how to bring boys into ecstasy.
to store used and new vehicles. Some ceilings
His Tesla Model X is what new cars used to be:
have not been repaired, broken tiles have not
full of features that you want to test. A bit like
been replaced. The birds have given themselves
Citroën once had. With the adaptive headlights
a place to joy and live. Wall coverings are
in the DS, or a satellite buttons on the steering
crumbling. The red and white decoration of the
wheel for the wipers and turn signals. Or with
corporate style highlights the latest machines
the on-board computers that Citroën from early
such as the Berlingo or an Xsara.
on assembled in their cars. It could do nothing,
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PA RT O N E E - M O BI L I T Y
Mobility in the near future
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The last 100 years have seen the car triumph as
stressful and we lose money every minute. And
the transport mode of choice. It has defined us
we want to live in green and healthy cities and
as individuals, extensions of our personality. It
we want to be able to move.
left a lasting mark on human history. However, cars are still the most popular mode
I do not believe the introduction of motorcars will ever affect the riding of horses British MP John Douglas-Scott-Montagu14
of transport. Nevertheless, thanks to new technology and innovation, the experience is going to change as a motorist. In the near future we face a new phase in mobility. Electric cars, autonomous cars, connected cars for a cleverer and less environmental damaging mode of transport. The car is has developed in a multimedia device rather than a vehicle bringing us from A to B.
In the beginning of the 21 century cars were th
still a far-fetched idea. People did not know
Like a smartphone, which we lived without until
much and people who did, did not, think it
about ten years ago and now cannot imagine
would last. The preference of transport was
living without, future automotive and other
horse-drawn. As shown in the picture below
mobility innovations will change fast from
during the Easter Parade in New York.
unthinkable to indispensable. The intention why Tesla was founded, Musk explains was founded
But they were wrong about cars. In ten years
with the goal of taking electric cars mainstream.
the horses were replaced by cars. As shown in the comparison of the Easter Parade on Fifth
“We are on the start of something brilliant when
Avenue in New York in 1900 and 1913.
it comes to movement.”15 We find ourselves
It is hard to predict the impact of new technology and how we embrace it. Technology changes things, changes society. You cannot be the guy or girl in the horse-drawn carriage. Cars changed the world. The way we lived, moved. But with this change, a century later we have come to a standstill. Global gridlock.
We are on the edge of something brilliant when it comes to movement Narinder Purba
Urban congestion, smog, and a 100 kilometre traffic jam that took twelve days to clear.
on the same point as a century ago, when the change went from a horse to a car. “As the
We are reaching our maximum capacity. It
century unfolds, one thing is certain, travel is
is damaging to our planet, it is not fun, it is
going to be better than it has ever been”.16
43
[26] Easter Parade on 5 th Avenue, New York (1900) - one car
[27] Easter Parade on 5 th Avenue, New York (1913) - one horse-drawn carriage
E-mobilty
44
Current situation E-mobility
Fifth Avenue is full of horses, with only one car.
Thus? Once the range realistic exceeds 300
Thirteen years later, a similar picture is taken
kilometres and the price drops below thirty
When we think about electric cars, most
with only cars and one horse. The car replaced
thousand Euros, electric mobility will explode.
people consider it a niche, irrelevant. Merely
the horse in one decade,
Some cars almost reach this point, and similar
for someone who cares about the environment.
cars from other brands are on their way. The
Some countries are even changing their laws in
Face the facts, he same happened with the rise
biggest problem will soon be the huge demand
disadvantage of the electric car. The Bovag in
of the radio, television, mobile phone. Suddenly
for batteries can be met. If that is successful,
the Netherlands only expects 10 thousand new
these new products were everywhere. Insiders
your next new car is electric.
electric vehicles to be sold in the next four years.
underestimate new technologies. Think of
The electric car is not doing well.
Kodak. Nokia, even Volkswagen.
Feeling towards E-mobility
The opposite is true, say technology researchers.
Volkswagen thought that they could continue
On the next few pages I show the research
We are at the beginning of the S-curve, which
and survive with diesel technology for the
into E-mobility in quotes and diagrams. To
every technological revolution experiences. New
coming years. Diesel Gate pressed Volkswagen
portray the feeling towards E-mobility and
technology is first picked up by a small group
to face the facts and they took a different
the significance of E-mobility, explained in
of affluent enthusiasts. For a while it seems that
direction. From 2020, CEO Matthias Müller
diagrams.
the novelty will have insufficient attention. Until
thinks a Golf diesel will cost the same as an
the circumstances changes, and suddenly more
electric car. And then things are going to
What is the reason that people decided to live
people acquire the product. Thereby reducing
happen fast. The electric car is much cheaper
with an electric car. It is not environmental
costs; even more people purchase the product,
in ‘fuel’ is cheaper and is used more efficiently
related, the arguments show an image of
and the sale will explode.
and requires less maintenance. A normal car
emotional desires; love and enthusiasm, people
has more or less two thousand moving parts,
are excited.
That effect is shown in the comparison of the
an electric Nissan Leaf has a twelve, including a
two pictures on the previous page. In 1900
steering wheel and wheels.
An automobile is ‘still an emotional purchase’.
But purchasers who once cared about chrome are now more emotional about technology add-ons that maintain drivers’ connectivity with their homes, offices and friends.17 George Will
Logic does not
often prevail in the marketplace Love, enthusiasm and emotional desires do.18 Zachary Shahan
I guess what I had not expected was getting in something that is a spaceship, it was sitting like in the future.19 Tesla owner
Things you would expect from a car built in the era of the
internet, a car built in the era of modern computers. 20 Tesla owner
45
Demand for (electric) mobility willincrease increase Demand for mobility will
46
3
50 %
billion
Annual worldwide increase of motorised vehicles until 2030
of the world’s population that will be middle class by 2050
people will inhabit the earth in 2050
%
9,5
7 billion (2016) ‘Future of highways’ Arup - 2014
Significance of e-mobility
Significance of e-mobility
53
56
95
The world has 53 years of oil usage left
Estimated 56% world oil consumption comes from transportation
95% of the world's transportation powered by fossil fuels
years
%
%
[28] Demand for E-Mobilit y [29] Significance of E-Mobilit y
Source http://www.bp.com/ http://www.epa.gov/ http://evsroll.com/Car_pollu9on_facts.html
You will soon be able to get Porsche performance for Buick prices and when you get that, neither Porsche nor Buick are able to compete. 21 Tony Seba
I could understand the electric, and believe it was a very important part, but that didn’t come first.
The car made measures of performance, beauty, absolute utility. With those things at mind it became apparent that this was something special.22 Tesla owner
47
Stakeholders
48
MANUFACTURER
CONSUMERS
EDUCATION
GOVERNMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE
RESEARCH
ELECTRICITY PRODUCERS
GRID OPERATORS
BATTERY MANUFACTURING
Concept e-mobility
PARTIAL SOLUTIONS TO E-MOBILITY
CATALYST FOR E-MOBILITY
[30] Stakeholders Future E-Mobilit y [31] Concept E-Mobilit y
SHOWCASE FUTURE OF E-MOBILITY
It is such a good feeling to drive a clean car. It means I have a clean conscience and it works out cheaper i n the long run. 23 Elisabeth Bryn
I am part of the electric movement.
I can be involved in this and make a change happen. 24 Tesla owner
If the government can make e-cars as affordable as petrol equivalents climate is not a problem, people buy them. 25 Zachary Shahan
49
“welcome everyone to the worlds’ first electric supercar”
“I am ast
“it is as q library for ch 48 50
“to find out just how fast it is I lined it up for a drag race against its petrol powered twin”
“it is not a torch!” “it is a rampant rabbit!”
“and it’s like a food torc
“what in th God is pow thin
“it sounds th sum of dre there are d “it feels brilliant”
tounded”
quiet as a church mice
“you put it in S+ mode and put your foot down’’ “this is mind-boggling” 49 51
electric, blender, a ch”
“and how can a glorified torch possibly beat a 6.2 litre V8”
he name of wering this ng!”
“this doesn’t feel like anything I have ever driven before, it feels like a thoroughbred”
hen like the eams, but drawbacks”
“but when there is no choice, when the oil has ran out, this car does at least show us that the speed machines will live on ”
52
53
PA RT O N E LE CO R B U SI E R
54
[34] Vers une Architec ture [35] Model maison Citrohan
Le Corbusier and the Car architecture and the automobile
Where does architecture and the automobile
to formulate a language that was related to the
principles of the car industry. If the principles
meet? Since the dawn there has been a strong
production and design process of the car. The
of the automotive industry were to be applied
relationship between the two. Many architects,
key to this was the car itself.
to houses, soon there would emerge valuable
including Le Corbusier, have tried to understand this strong relationship.
unknown
forms.
Through
applying
the
The car was admired as a symbol of until then
industrial methods, soon there would be an
unprecedented speeds, as well as an aesthetic
aesthetic form that appealed to the human sense
The car itself was a model for a new élan, a new
object. The development of the car was an
of beauty. The same level had to be achieved in
modern architecture. The appealing thing of
excellent example of mechanical evolution in
the functional field. The key was perfection.
the car was its fast evolution. This evolution,
the eyes of the purists. Especially the speed
To reach perfection, a ‘standart’ needed to be
different from that of the architecture, was
of this evolution was easy to oversee. The
formulated. ‘Standart’ was the collection of
simple to keep track of because of its speed. The
development of the car happened in one
universal values that determined the perfect
car was in terms of structure easy to compare
lifetime; simultaneously with the generation of
solution to a problem.
with
Le Corbusier and Ozenfant. The process of the
architecture.
“The
static
controlled
environment is called architecture”,
26
wrote
Stephen Bayley in Sex, Drink and Fast Cars.
car engineer and manufacturer could therefore
The evolution in architecture was in a crisis.
serve as a format for the new architect.
Contemporary architecture did not have a
The only difference between an automobile and
‘standart’. Compared with the development
a building is the immobility of the latter. This
of the car the backlog became apparent. The
caught the imagination of the generations of architects who came along with rise of the car. They were part of the first generation who grew up with the car. And Le Corbusier was one of them. Le Corbusier’s propositions came down to this: anyone who travels in a modern and advanced invention like the car is in need of an architecture that is modern and advanced as
If houses were built industrially, massproduced like chassis, an aesthetic would be formed with surprising precision Le Corbusier, 1923.
well.
solution thought to find Le Corbusier in the rapid evolution of the car. Thus the evolution of the car was a blueprint for the evolution of architecture. Maison Citrohan. Le Corbusier visited the Ford plant. “Why can’t we mass-produce houses – standard, welldesigned, at low cost – in the same way Ford
The follow up question was, how could one
Once, architecture was able to reach such
arrive at such an architecture? The automobile
perfection like the development of the car:
performed as an example in the development
the Greek Temples. Le Corbusier liked to
Citrohan to not use Citroën, in other words,
of
machine
make analogical leaps. A famous analogical
a house like a car. According to Le Corbusier,
aesthetics. Aesthetics because it turned out that
leap was the Parthenon - 1921 Grand-Sport
a house had to be designed, produced and
the industrial design and manufacturing in the
automobile analogy. The Delage Grand-Sport
constructed like an automobile. Due to the cars
automotive industry developed its own design
was ‘perfection’, the same as the Parthenon had
necessary and efficient and commercial design
language in a short time. Functionality because
reached perfection in architecture. However
method, there would appear an esthetical and
the function of the car, the driving, was the main
perfection was hard to find in architecture at
functional design. Maison Citrohan is the only
aspect in the design. And machine aesthetics
this moment.
example executed in this philosophy.
produced car showed universal values. Le
Nevertheless, everything could still work
Using the technique and production methods
Corbusier conclude that the architecture had
out if architects would act according to the
of the car industry it was possible to distil the
aesthetics,
functionality
and
mass-produces cars”.
because the design language of the industrially
55
56
[36] Voisin in Villa Savoye [37] Voisin in front of Villa Savoye
universal laws of nature and generate a new
at that time. However, the test track was more
that circulation is as important as structure
aesthetic. In addition, with a similar production,
of a playground for cars and a testimony of a
- architecture is circulation and it ought to be
problems in the new age could be resolved, such
modern esprit in the design. The use of this roof
properly articulated.
as living demands, housing shortages and car
was a manifesto for the future of society. Villa Savoye
nuisance. One can notice the resemblance with Le The arrival of the (‘electric’) car also brought
Corbusier’s Unité d’Habitation. Functional
Le Corbusier’s early integration of the car
new industries and businesses with it. The
program on the roof. One of the functions was
would eventually lead to Villa Savoye (1928-
arrival of the automobile thus initiated the
the running track that was added on top of this
1932), which would be the most consistent
development of a number of new buildings
concrete housing block in Marseille.
elaboration of this idea. Villa Savoye was built
such as garages and petrol stations. This also
entirely around the car (Le Corbusier’s own
drew the attention of Le Corbusier. In ‘Vers
The habitations, the vertical cities, hovering
Voisin) and was the sum of Corbusier’s ideas
une Architecture’ and in ‘Oevre Complète
on pilotis. In this way, the apartments were
until then. All five points for a new architecture
separated from the dynamic, according to Le
were applied in the design and the promenade
Corbusier. Namely, by putting the building on
was the essence of the villa. He considered the
stilts, housing was separated from the moving
design as a miniature urban puzzle. How could
activities such as driving. Obviously, a never
he connect the circulation of the car outside the
executed garage was planned between the
house to the circulation inside the house?
A house is a machine for living in. Le Corbusier, 1923.
pilotis. The circulation inside the house was a Promenade Architecturale
1929-1934’ for example, was paid considerable
continuation of the route outside the house. Just as outside they had to choose between
attention to Fiat’s Lingotto factory, built between
Maison Citrohan already showed that even
two routes. The concept was reminiscent of
1917 and 1922 in Turin. Le Corbusier visited the
existing building needed adjustments to fit this
the baroque gardens, like the gardens designed
building. The Fiat factory was renowned among
new invention, called the automobile. Maison
by Andre Le Notre, which during the walk the
modern architects. The publication in ‘Vers une
Citrohan had a rudimentary garage, yet no
visitor was confronted with unexpected visual
Architecture’ enhanced it.
solution for the approach and entrance for the
attractions. The arrival by car and the appearance
car itself.
of the house seen from inside the car were part
The factory was an early example of the
of this. The way the car could get inside Villas
possibilities of concrete structures and full of new
The approach of a car would act as a superb
Savoye was a derivative of the traffic, in the Plan
solutions. The building illustrated the beauty of
extension of the circulation, the ‘Architectural
Voisin. The different types of traffic, in this case
the construction in the new age. The plant was
Promenade’, which Le Corbusier quickly
the pedestrian and the car, had to be on separate
stuffed with new inventions and gadgets. This
incorporated into his designs. The approach of
levels. Villa Savoye resulted in the desire to
made the building a sort of industrial temple.
a car connecting to the circulation appeared for
dictate the distance between the car and the
Like the striking ramps for cars, that meandered
the first time in the design of Villa Favre Jacot
domain of pedestrians. The ground floor acted
through the complex. Their end destination was
in 1912. The ‘Promenade Architecturale’ was a
as the transition area and connection to the
spectacular: a complete test track on the roof.
path through and around spaces and volumes
inner Architectural Promenade.
Prototypes could also deliver cars to be tried in
of the building designed with the aim to offer
peace and security. The speed limit was around
an aesthetic experience. But the circulation
Separating walkers and the circulation of the
100 kilometres per hour, which was enough
also followed from Le Corbusier’s beliefs
car became a common factor for his designs.
57
58
[38] Voisin in front of the Pavillon de Suisse [39] Le Corbusier and his Voisin
The design for an apartment building in Algiers
handmade bed or an established typology like
an expression of itself, with its own machine
(L’Oued-Ouchaia
logic and its own style.
contained
the Paris’ Hôtel. The characteristics of the car
an internal street underneath the building,
and
Durand)
in design, functionality and production, were
separating pedestrians and cars but connecting
also the characteristics of the modern home, the
Le Corbusier moved beyond his theory,
the flows on the ‘street’ Like Villa Savoye and the
modern bed, the characteristics of modern life.
entering (with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret) an
Lingotto Factory, also a reminiscent of urban
automobile design competition. He submitted
design, the apartment building was a vertical
plans for ‘a minimalist vehicle for maximum
city with its own traffic solution. - The same
functionality,’ the Voiture Minimum. Despite
idea applied to Citroën Yser Brussels. André Citroën wanted his workshop and showroom in Brussels to be a miniature city. A balance between a workshop and a city café. - A drive could, like in Villa Savoye begin or end in the building. So, one of the requirements of modern life was fulfilled.
Le Corbusier insisted that his buildings photographed with a modern automobile in the foreground. Antonio Amado, 2011.
the energetic promotion of Le Corbusier for his design to several important automakers, the Voiture Minimum was never mass-produced. The Citroën 2CV and the Voiture Minimum designs that were clearly derived from the same objective and ‘esprit’. They were basic solutions, or really the standard for driving. It was the sublime functionality. Perhaps the 2CV was the
Voisin
only true successor of Le Corbusier’s idea. Pavillon Suisse Citroen DS
Voisin and Le Corbusier had a close relationship. He insisted that his buildings photographed
The car was the model for the structure of
with a modern automobile in the foreground.
the building. The building consisted of a
The DS, the first intelligently designed car,
The different pictures of Villa Stein shows the
metal skeleton placed on concrete pilotis, the
the result of a selection which the 2CV and
Voisin as an indispensable ornament to the
industrialization of architecture was born. The
the products of Voisin pointed out the right
Villa. The resemblance between the Voisin with
use of pilotis kept the ground floor free for
direction. The DS was maybe the ‘standart’. Even
a factory bodywork and the Villa became clear.
dynamic activities. The pilotis are a solution to
the thesis of Le Corbusier that the aerodynamics
Following the example of the Voisin, the house
the traffic problems in the city. Function and
should answer to the laws of nature became true.
had functional design, primary forms, sober
ability pilotis.
As he predicted in ‘Vers une Architecture’, the
elegance and a large area of glass. Both objects were products of the new industrialized society.
design of the DS from the aerodynamics of birds Cité de Refuge
Both were the avant-garde of their area and
and fishes. A high degree of perfection had been reached in the unprecedented smooth surface
time. This was the architecture and transport of
All aesthetic and construction principles of Le
of the DS-bodywork. In this car Le Corbusier’s
the modern humans.
Corbusier’s architecture were present in the
previously dropped propositions came together.
buildings and thus the relationship with the car. This was the appropriate architecture that would
So the picture can only relate to the shape and
With the help of the selection process, on the
perfectly fit with the car, a modern invention. He
structural relationship of the two objects.
basis of economic and functional goals, one had
denounced the so-called modern man, excited
Voiture Minimum.
arrived at the ‘standart’. The Citroën DS was
about the technically advanced car, but slept
obviously a French ‘standart’. It was the poetic
without worries at night in a handmade Breton
Of course Le Corbusier practiced at a time when
bed. With the excitement and enthusiasm
the automobile was just emerging from its time
for cars belonged a new lifestyle without a
without horses and carriages and was becoming
translation of an advanced driving machine.
59
60
[40] Vers une Architec ture - Le Corbusier
61
[41] Vers une Architec ture - L’Elzen
62
63
PA RT O N E T Y PO LOGY R E S E A RC H
64
“A time when speed really was everything”
“Reminder of a time of unbridled enthusiasm and speed”
65
“Celebration of the automobile, speed, and power above all else�
Factory the image of modernity
66
The factory is the most effective shop window, conveying an image of modernity or tradition, as required. The building can be an effective metaphor. The factory might serve as a sales vehicle. One of the first examples of this phenomenon wad the Ford River Rouge Plant in. As one visitor described it: “each unit is a carefully
People like to do business with a welldressed factory just as truly as they prefer to business with welldressed men Albert Kahn
designed gear which meshes with other gears operated in synchronism with them, the whole forming one huge, perfectly-timed, smoothly
The Factory as an Icon.
operating industrial machine of an almost
The Factory as a Sales Tool.
unbelievable efficiency.”
The Factory as Laboratory.
...factories, the reassuring first fruits of the new age. Le Corbusier28
Usually, a factory is a closed facility, not accessible by members of the public. My aim is to create a city centre building, a cultural monument as much as a research center and automotive plant in the historic city centre of Brussels.
Something alike happened in Italy a few years
“Heavy industry in the centre of town? Why
later. Futurist Marinetti wasted no time in
not,” says Jonathan Glancey. “Dresden’s new
claiming the Fiat Lingotto factory as “the first
VW plant is on a par with Tate Modern and the
invention of Futurist construction” , for it
Bilbao Guggenheim.”32 Volkswagen’s Glaeserne
was the automobile that carried the hopes of
Manufaktur is the proof that industry, in a
Futurists. Likewise. André Citroën was quick
modern 21st century style can be part of the city
to realize the advantages of a strong corporative
and its something to celebrate.
31
identity and brought flair to his design of dealership and service centres.
My building should be a machine for Mobility, A machine for (driving) electric cars. Therefore
Factories aim to promote a manufacturer’s
the Future Mobility Center should have a
identity, and as a result they are architectural
slight resemblance to an image of a factory. A
phenomena in their own right. The architecture
manifestation of celebrating technology in a
advertises the design philosophy and power of
modern urban (cultural) factory.
the manufacturer.
[44] Fagus-Werk - Walter Gropius
67
Lingotto factory by Giacomo Matté-Trucco
68
“Workshops and a rooftop racetrack, Fiat’s
gradually moved through the upper floors until
lingotto factory was an icon of Italian
they emerged at the top, complete and ready
industrialism. Nowadays it is a cultural centre
to be tested on the roof track. It was brilliantly
and retail space, transformed by Renzo Piano.
logical and showed how Fiat was at the cutting
“The building remains a reminder of a time of
edge of the new industry.”34
unbridled enthusiasm and speed.”33 It boosted Italy’s standing as a country of The architect was Giacomo Matté-Trucco,
innovation. It was the idea of driving on the
fascinated by the form of modern factories,
roof that fired the imagination of the people,
the Fiat factory was Europe’s most modern and
and especially modern architects, who were
largest car manufacturer plant. He brought in
adding rooftop terraces to their buildings.
the production line, after seeing it in action at
The roof track remains today, a reminder of
Ford in the US. “The basic materials were first
an exhilarating time when speed was really
assembled on the ground floor and vehicles were
everything!
READY
BASIS [45] Lingot to Fac tor y Concept [46] Le Corbusier on the roof top track [47- 49] Roof top track Lingot to Fac tor y
69
Assenvaux Imperia rooftop track Belgium
70
Fiat’s imposing Lingotto was not the only factory with a rooftop test track. Imperia, a long-dead Belgian car manufacturer, also had a similar facility in Nessonvaux, about sixteen kilometres southeast of Liege, predating Turin’s more famous version of the concept by several years. The approximately one kilometre long track was made of brick pavers with a concrete banking for its south-west and north-west corners, which was needed to allow the nearly 90 degree turns between the peaked rooftops of the huge assembly buildings it ran atop. Today, the factory and portions of the test track still exist in varying degrees of disrepair
[50 -52] Fac tor y roof top test track current state
El Palacio Chrysler rooftop track Buenos Aires - Argentina
In 1928, five years after Fiat opened their
71
Lingotto plant, Chrysler’s Argentine distributors opened a building to assemble, test, sell and race cars in Buenos Aires. The building was designed by Mario Palanti and occupied an entire city block. But it was the roof that was the eye-catcher. Equipped with a test track of 1.6 kilometre, it was used for testing cars and inviting the high society of Argentina to look at them. In the late nineties the building was converted into apartments.
[53-56] Roof top track Chr ysler 1928
Renault Centre by Foster Architects
72
The Renault Centre is a high tech-building
housing both production and office workers in
in Swindon commissioned by the French car
relatively undifferential spaces.”35
company Renault for their UK operations. Designed by Foster Associates, it opened in
“Modernism preaches standardization and mass-
1982 and eventually Renault moved out in 2001.
production on a global scale, the standardization at Renault is confined to small batch production
The architecture expressed not only the corporate
of the buildings’ own systems.”36 The structural
ownership with the yellow of Renault used on
engineer was Ove Arup & Partners. The cable
all the structural elements, but also promoted
stayed steel structural system provides a 24m.
a modern statement on industrial relations by
column clear zone, with the columns of only
using the same roof over the warehouse and
450mm diameter.
office elements, making no distinction between white- and blue-collar workers. “Out went the
The Renault Centre showed that the Modernist
usual ‘white collars’ workers office box on the
dream of machine production in architecture is
front and ‘blue collar’ workers ‘tin shed’ at the
finally within reach.
back, to be replaced with a unitary structure
73
[57] Construc tion principle [58] Construc tion principle [59] Construc tion [60] Interior Renault Centre [61] Renault Centre [62] Renault Centre
BMW central building by Zaha Hadid architects
74
Hadid’s BMW Central Building, which was
Levete believes that the integration of the
completed in 2005, connects three separate
production
production buildings on the manufacturing
administrative facilities broke down barriers
complex of BMW in Leipzig.
between blue- and white-collar workers.
The building contains offices, meeting rooms,
“She took a very complex brief – and I think
and management and administrative staff, but
Zaha was at her best when she had a very
also features a large elevated conveyor that
complex programme to deal with – and totally
moves cars through the building every day from
turned it on its head,” says Amanda Levete.37
one production complex to another.
line
with
management
and
75
[63] [64] [65] [66] [67]
Ground floor plan Interior BMW Central building Interior BMW Central building Assembly line Ex terior BMW Central building
GM Technical Center by Eero Saarinen
76
In May 1956 inauguration took place of the colossal General Motors Technical Center in Warren, Michigan, designed by Eero Saarinen. Saarinen convinced that the Center should be an expression of mass production, high precision and metal industry. Saarinen felt his design concept should be “based on steel - the metal of the automobile,�38 according to his wife, Aline. Like the car itself, the buildings are arranged together, as on a mass-production line, The Center was a pinnacle in innovative techniques;
neoprene
gaskets,
porcelain
spandrels of sandwich construction, and innovations of curtain wall design. General Motors and Saarinen had set a new standard for industrial architecture.
[68] Lobby [69] Design Dome GM [70] Water tower [71] Entrance
77
78
79
PA RT T WO TH E i n q u i ry
80
81
PA RT T WO B r u s s e ls
Europe governed from Brussels
82
Brussels, officially named the Brussels-Capital Region is a region of Belgium comprising 19 municipalities, including the City of Brussels which is the capital of Belgium. The BrusselsCapital Region is part of both the French society of Belgium and the Flemish society. Nevertheless, Brussels is separated from the
BRUSSELS 1.2m people
region of Flanders or Wallonia. The region has a population of 1.2 million and a metropolitan area with a population of over 1.8 million, the largest in Belgium. Brussels hosts the official seats of the European Commission, Council of the European Union, and European Council, as well as a seat of the European Parliament. “Traffic congestion analysis consistently shows a surprising fact: Brussels and Antwerp, the
BELGIUM 11m people
two largest cities in Belgium, are the two most congested cities in Europe and North America. This was confirmed in the latest ranking from
BELGIUM 11m people
Inrix, a traffic data organisation. It is estimated that drivers in Brussels waste 83 hours a year in traffic. How did the administrative heart of the European Union get into this traffic mess? Company car, people live too far from work, unattractive alternatives, a healthy economy and an ill-conceived road network.�1 So, this seems to be a fitting place to start a Future Mobility Center.
EUROPE 510m people BELGIUM 369 people / km2
[2] Statistic s Europe [3] Map Europe
83
BRUSSELS
ATOMIUM
84
BUSINESS DISTRICT
CITROËN YSER STATION BRUSSEL NOORD
‘GROTE MARKT’
EUROPEAN UNION
ROYAL PALACE
MUSEUMS
UNIVERSITY CAMPUS
AUDI CARS FACTORY
Brussels the ‘heart’ of Europe
AIRPORT NATO
Since the end of the Second World War, Brussels
institutions are located within the European
has been a major centre for international politics
Quarter of Brussels. From the 19 century the
and has become the home of international
Francization of Brussels started. Nowadays,
organizations,
diplomats.
Brussels-Capital-Region is an officially bilingual
Brussels is ‘the capital’ of the European Union
enclave in the Flemish Region. All road signs,
as it accommodates a large number of EU
street names and services are shown in French
institutions. The secretariat of the Benelux,
and Dutch. Brussels is becoming multilingual
Eurocontrol and the headquarters of the
with increasing numbers of migrants, expats,
NATO are also located in Brussels. Most of the
speaking their own languages.
politicians
and
th
foreigners non-EU 11%
foreigners EU
23%
66%
belgiums
1 out fo 3 inhabitants is foreign
french & dutch dutch other [4] Over view Brussels [5] Statistic s Brussels
17%
38%
5%
17%
23% french & other
french language
85
Brussels
86
Juxtaposition Brussels itself, a mix of industry, offices, culture and housing. Not in specified areas, but in a mix scattered throughout the city. The same applies for the area around CitroÍn Yser. The structure of this area started with the construction of the Canal which largely contributed to determine the use of this land and its later development. It is blend mingle of industry, offices and housing. There is still a few small industries in the Food domain, the Automobile domain, and other small activities which doesn’t necessarily have a great impact on the area. On the other hand, large industries in the Logistics and the Construction domains remain heavily present. Canal Area
BRUSSELS
BRUSSELS
BRUSSELS
BRUSSELS
Events like Festival Kanal and PleinOPENair organize their festivals around the channel in summertime. The only currently visible waterway in Brussels is slowly evolved. With new bridges and parks, a shopping mall, a large residential tower and possibly even a new marina. The old industrial area along the canal is developing into an attractive meeting place.
[6] Jux tapostion in func tion, architec ture, morphology
87
CITROËN YSER BRUSSELS
1.400m GROTE MARKT BRUSSELS
HISTORIC CITY CENTRE OF BRUSSELS
[7] Distance Citroën Yser to the centre of the historic cit y of Brussels - 1:20.000
88
[8] Jux tapostion of func tions, architec ture, morphology [9] Aerial map - location CitroĂŤn Yser Brussels
89
CITROËN YSER
Urban development 1930-2015
90
1930 - 1935
1944
1953
1971
1996
2015
[10] Aerial photograph - Urban development - 1930 -2015
1930 - 1935
1944
1953
1971
1996
2015
[11] Aerial photograph - Urban development - 1930 -2015
91
92
PLACE SAINCTELETTE
PLACE DE L’YSER
[12] Place de l’ Yser before the construc tion
93
CITROËN YSER BRUSSELS
[13] Aerial view bet ween 1933-1935
94
south east
south west
[14] three-dimensional view - south east [15] three-dimensional view - south west
95
nor th west
nor th east
[16] three-dimensional view - norht west [17] three-dimensional view - noth east
CITROËN YSER 96
DEVELOPING CANAL AREA
CENTRAL BUSINESS DISTRICT RESIDENTIAL
HISTORIC CITY CENTRE
[18] location [19] program
SIMONIS (LEOPOLD III)
SIMONIS (ELISABETH)
RIBACOURT
BRUXELLES NORD
YSER IJZER ETANGS NORIS ZWARTE VIJVERS
ROGIER
COMTE DE FLANDRE GRAAF VAN VLAANDEREN
BOTANIQUE KRUIDTUIN
BOURS BEURS
ST-KATELIJNE STE-CATHERINE
PORTE DE NINOVE NINOOFSEPOORT
HISTORIC CITY CENTRE N-WEGEN [20] public transpor t [21] main roads
BRUXELLESCONGRES
97
98
[22] Aerial over view around CitroĂŤn Yser
99
100
CI TR O Ë N YS
101
E R B R U S S E LS
102
[24] Adver tisemt CitroĂŤn with a drawing of what the garage should have looked like [25] Cover design of the CitroĂŤn journal
103
[26] Original drawing showing the original colors of the garage [27] Original drawing at night of how the building should have looked like
104
[28] Construc tion of the salle d’exposition in 1933
105
[29] Construc tion of the hall in 1933
106
[30] Construc tion of the showroom [31] Construc tion of the faรงade - Quai de Willebroeck
107
[32] Construc tion of the exhibition hall [33] Construc tion of the exhibition hall
108
[34] Exhibiton hall [35] CitroÍn 2CV ’s in front of the building
109
[36] 2CV ’s & helicopter in front of the workshop [37] 2CV ’s & helicopter in front of the workshop
110
[38] Storage of CitroÍn Trac tion Avant ’s [39] Hall during construc tion
111
[40] Spare par ts warehouse [41] Assembly
112
[42] ‘ Viaduc t van Koekelberg’ & Citroën Yser - 1960s [43] Exhibition hall - 1970s
113
[44] Finished exhibition hall in 1934 [45] Exhibition hall today
114
[46] Entrance Quai de Willebroeck - 2016
115
[47] ‘Cathedral’ - 2016
116
[48] Exhibition hall at night - 2000s [49] Canal side - 2000s
117
[50] Canal side - 2016 [51] Other side of the canal - 2000s
118
119
120
[53] Current construc tion of the exhibition hall
121
[54] Build-up of the struc ture
122
[55] Construc tion principle
123
[56] Comparison of the workshop hall in the 1930s and now [57] Comparison of the exhibition hall in the 1930s and now
124
125
PA RT T WO I N Q UI RY: CO N STR U CT IO N O F CA R S
Construction of Cars Observe the ‘architecture’ of cars for architecture
126
monocoque [59]
‘skateboard’ [60]
ladder chassis [61]
self supporting body [62]
aluminium ssb [63]
tube frame ssb [64]
127
128
129
PA RT T WO P R og r a m m i n g a futu r e m o b i l i t y c e n te r
50 m
130
[66] programmatic possibilities
Inquiry into the program
An inquiry into programming a cultural
•
Subsidised vs. non-subsidised program
empty car plant, a mix of program in the direct
program. How will I come to a program? How
•
Time, how to plan the execution of the
context, cultural program, automobile industry,
design
a university and historical city centre. So why
Money, how to find money and funding for
not come up with something is an addition to
the project
the cultural significant historical city centre,
Organization – client & project
almost competing with it. A program that
can I connect the site on a local and global scale to determine the cultural program interweaving
•
on all scales. Ranging from a Local Regional National International, maybe even a Global
•
scale. Search for your target group. Which functions are already there, in the city centre
represents the future. Thoughts and directions for the Program
and the outskirts of the city? Also regarding the
In May I cycled back home from a day of work
following aspects:
The former Citroën workshop is located in
in the graduation studio and I ran into a Tesla
•
Non destination visitors vs. Destination
the heart of Brussels, it could be interesting if
Models S. The most popular electric car of the
visitors
the location is to be developed into a 24 hour
moment and it hit me. Why not transform my
Trying to found out an around the clock
economy, crowds leaving the restaurant or club
former Citroën dealership and service centre
program, especially if a building site is on a
would meet the workers on their way to work in
in Brussels into some sort of Future Mobility
more remote location. 24hr city?!
the early hours.
Center (by Tesla, funding) where you can have
•
•
Public versus a private program
•
Paid vs. free functions, a program that is
conventions, Potential program
presentations,
performances,
exhibitions, research and retail. All centred in
accessible to everyone to experience the
one ‘campus’ in the middle of the ‘capital of
building without paying for it. A public
If we take several aspects together we could
Europe‘ in a workshop that was once the space
route through private functions.
arrive at a reasoned program. We have an
of the most innovative carmaker in the sixties.
Working together to solve a complex issue
Catalyst for innovation
Stakeholders within EU
PUBLIC AWARENESS
Open exchange of data
Working together on every level
BUSINESS RESEARCH EDUCATION GOVERNANCE PROMOTION
[67] programmatic concept
All kinds of mobility Different approaches bring countries, cities Science and business meets
131
Program programming a Future Mobility Center
MOBILITY PLATFORM TO DEMONSTRATE THE LATEST MOBILITY, INVENTIONS & PROTOTYPES FROM START-UPS TO THE WORLD’S MOBILITY/TECH TITANS
WINDOW INTO THE FUTURE
CONNECTIVITY
COMMUNITY 132
HUMAN PERFORMANCE CENTER
We notice that a complex problem like our
INTERACTIVE DESIGN STUDIO
future mobility can only be resolved by working
DRIVING SIMULATOR
as a collective. A partial solution is simply not
TESTING THE LATEST INVENTIONS AND PROTOTYPES
good enough. Together we can make it work.
TRACK
There should be an accelerator.
EXPERIENCE THE LATEST MOBILITY, INVENTIONS & PROTOTYPES
To make electric cars / mobility a success,
TESTING
TRIBUNE
you need to work together on multiple levels.
PODIUM, PRESENTING
Governance, infrastructure, power companies,
LABS
manufacturers and academia. The main aim of the complex is to fully integrate display, learning and exhibition functions in combination with
OFFICES
R&D
a research and development and production facility to strengthening the links between the
TESTING THE LATEST INVENTIONS AND PROTOTYPES
STUDIO SPACE
centre and the city.
DESIGN STUDIOS WITH UNIVERSITIES, COMPANIES AND RESEARCH PARTNERS
WORK SHOPS
The next two pages contain collages, explaining E-mobility, the part of experience inside the
SPECIALIZED WORKSHOPS
complex
BUILDING PROTOYPES
PRODUCTION FACILITY OFFICES
R&D WINDOW INTO FUTURE
Connectivity
Community
Mobility
LOADING DOCKS
EXPERIENCE
SHOW CASE
PRODUCTION PRODUCTION
SHOW ROOM
TESTING
€€€ FOR RENT PUBLIC TALKS & EVENTS
SELLING €€€
CONFERENCE CENTRE OPEN OFFICES
R&D €€€ FOR RENT
EXPERIENCE
SHOW CASE
PRODUCTION
PRODUCTION PRODUCTION
TESTING
BOARD ROOMS TRAINING
ADVANCED COURSES SPECIALIZED WORKSHOPS
HORECA CLUB PANORAMA VIEW
[68] programatic concept
[69] program
HORECA
PANORAMA VIEW
WORK SHOPS PRODUCTION FACILITY
COMMUNITY
STUDIO SPACE
PODIUM, PRESENTING
CONNECTIVITY
OFFICES
CLUB
MOBILITY
LABS
TRIBUNE
SHOW ROOM
HUMAN PERFORMANCE CENTER
INTERACTIVE DESIGN STUDIO DRIVING SIMULATOR
OFFICES TRAINING LOADING DOCKS
CONFERENCE CENTRE
BOARD ROOMS OPEN OFFICES
[70] track connec ting the program
MOBILITY STATIC & INTERACTIVE & CREATE
CONNECTIVITY CONNECTIVITY IS BECOMING SECOND NATURE MOBILITY PART OF YOUR DIGITAL LIFE
COMMUNITY
EXPLORE NETWORKING EVENTS PITCH EVENTS LEARNING TALKS FROM THE PEOPLE THEMSELF
[71] ‘window into the future’ scheme
133
Welcome to the future, all
134
You can become part of this future with E-MOBILITY now!
Getting in something that is a spaceship, it was sitting in the future
Window into Future
A smartphone on wheels
Entertainment
Connectivity
[72] window into the future [73] connec tivit y
A smartphone on wheels: here’s how tomorrow’s intelligent vehicles work
Progress, becoming part of the mobility of tomorrow
Mobility
Communication / gathering and exchange about use/ownership, socially engaged
The 2015 edition had 225 electric vehicles driving a total of 42.800 km and emitting 0.0 g/km of CO2.
Community
[74] mobilit y [75] communit y
135
Constructing a track an element of thrill
136
Every part of the building has a different
watch cars being flogged around you, making
relationship with the test- and racetrack.
some points in the complex an exciting resting
Wherever you are, you will have a new view on
spot. The track is a path through and around
the course. Around every corner you will find a
spaces and volumes of the building designed
new view. A view to allow the public to sit and
with the aim to offer an aesthetic experience.
[76] Por traying BMW track on the original 1933 plan
137
[77] Relation to the track
138
139
PA RT TH R E E D E SIG N
140
[1] Collage
The problem statement finalizing the research question
141
The choice of Citroën Yser as the building
it for the 21st century. In our recent history,
electric vehicle (EV) experience. Pam Fletcher,
to transform and design into a public Future
factories - places for manufacturing, shaping
Chief Engineer for EVs at General Motors (GM)
Mobility Center forms the next part of its
and assembling - were an integral part of our
explains: “The people that have owned and lived
ongoing reconstruction. The new building
towns and cities. Our towns and cities often
with EVs can understand it, they’ve seen how
should, however, include replacements for the
grew up around them as workers, owners and
the vehicles work for them. It is part of the
demolished facilities.
the machinery were based in close proximity to
learning curve and more people will understand
each other. Factories were an integrated part of
it over time. It’s hard to explain to people the
Industry is being replaced by ‘culture’. The aim
our living environment. They created jobs and
benefits if they haven’t had that experience.”
of the Future Mobility Center is to be both a
generated an urban economy.
location for research and production while,
The challenge of the Future Mobility Center
at the same time, offering a public cultural
Today, all those factories have left the city.
is to offer a functional blend of culture,
experience. These functions will be included in
Moving to low-wage countries. This has changed
manufacturing and capitalism. This has resulted
the building’s ambition to announce its factory-
the dynamics of the once thriving cities, by
in the following problem statement:
related functions to the public, with the aim of
eliminating the process of manufacturing from
persuading the public of the benefits of future
the everyday lives of the people.
How can a new mobility institution provide space for urban manufacturing, such that the public
mobility, and electric mobility in particular. The aim of the Future Mobility Center is to A factory or industrial building, can form a part
showcase and enable the public to experience
of our cities. And it is something to celebrate.
electric mobility. One certain way to get the
Provided, that is, that we are able to restyle
e-mobility message across is to give people an
can experience the future of mobility?
Transformation strategies
142
PRESERVATION
PRESERVATION
POINT ZERO
+ NEW ADDITION
BOX IN BOX - EXTERIOR INTACT
BOX IN BOX - EXTERIOR INTACT + NEW ADDITION
RESTORE EXTERIOR
RESTORE EXTERIOR + NEW ADDITION
INTERPRETER OLD FACADE IN NEW FACADE
INTERPRETER OLD FACADE IN NEW FACADE + NEW ADDITION
+ NEW ADDITION
NEW
[2] Transformation strategies
[3] Transformation strategies
Early mass studies
143
[4] Early studies
144
EXPERIENCE
MEETING
PRODUCTION
R&D SHOW CASE
TESTING
LEARNING
OPEN ROUTE ‘SHOWCASING’
CROSS REFERENCE BETWEEN DISCIPLINES
[5] Diagrams of concept & program
STREET OF THE FUTURE
145
EXPERIENCE
MEETING
PRODUCTION
FUTURE EXPANSION
R&D SHOW CASE
TESTING
LEARNING
EXPANDING TOWARDS THE FUTURE
POSSIBILITIES
[6] Diagrams of program planning
POSSIBILITIES
Concept
146
E-MOBILITY IS THE FUTURE AND COOL!
PU
[7] Concept
The first toss at a concept. The Future Mobility Center should display itself as a shopping window, like a shop in a city centre. Promote its
PROMOTION
goods inside the shop. Furthermore, the aim of the building should be to create awareness for electric mobility
PROMOTION
PUBLIC AWARENESS
147
Diagrams
148
Confrontation EXPLORATION
technology
JOURNEY
Community
COMMUNITY
Window into Future
Mobility Connectivity
Confrontation
ELECTRICITY
Electricity
Community Window into Future
Mobility Connectivity Electricity
Communication / gathering and exchange about use/ownership, socially engaged
The 2015 edition had 225 electric vehicles driving a total of 42.800 km and emitting 0.0 g/km of CO2.
TESTING
Community e, all e futur
e to th
om Welc
s rt of thi me pa Y now! n beco BILIT You ca th E-MO wi t is a future ng tha future methi the g in so ting in Gettin , it was sit hip spaces
w into
Windo A smartphone on wheels
PRODUCTION EXPERIENCE
A smartphone on wheels: here’s how tomorrow’s intelligent vehicles work
Future
Progress, becoming part of the mobility of tomorrow
Entertainment
Mobility
Connectivity
R&D SHOW CASE
R&D WINDOW INTO FUTURE
Connectivity
EXPERIENCE
Community
Mobility
SHOW CASE
[8] Various diagrams
PRODUCTION PRODUCTION
TESTING
EXPERIENCE
PRODUCTION PRODUCTION
TESTING
In July and August, the amount of diagrams got a bit out of control. Nevertheless, they helped to derive the concept, program, routing and spatial The left page explores the program, especially to grasp the essence of E-mobility, by taking it apart in different subjects. Through translating these collages and 2D diagrams into 3D diagrams, it gave me reason to explore this in the architecture of my design. While designing, these diagrams were always in the back of my had. The diagrams on the bottom of these pages
CONNECTIVITY R&D
EXPERIENCE
of the production and labs beneath.
THE FUTURE NOW!
CONNECTIVITY
TESTING
WINDOW IN THE FUTURE
MOBILITY
PRODUCTION
community as separate volumes in one, on top
WINDOW IN THE FUTURE
COMMUNITY
SHOW CASE
of E-mobility, in connectivity, mobility and
MOBILITY
COMMUNITY
are the closest to the final design. The world
SHOW CASE
PRODUCTION
TESTING
R&D
EXPERIENCE
THE FUTURE TODAY
WINDOW INTO FUTURE
Connectivity WINDOW INTO FUTURE
WINDOW INTO FUTURE
Mobility
Future
R&D SHOW CASE
[8] Various diagrams
EXPERIENCE
PRODUCTION PRODUCTION
TESTING
149
150
Display of all the different types of e-mobility transportation subjects. Portrayed behind the buildings’ facade as a continuous motion and theatre, happening right behind the facade.
[9] t ypes of e-mobilit y
151
152
O N C E TH E SYMBOL O F I N N OVATI O N
1933 [10] Cutaway Citroën DS [11] Original drawing Citroën Yser
153
TH E N E W SYMBOL O F F UTU RE TE C H N OLOGY & I N N OVATI O N
2017 [12] Cutaway BMW i3 [13] Future Mobilit y Center
154
155
PA RT TH R E E FU TU R E M O BI L I T Y C E N TE R
156
[15]
[16]
[17]
Transformation
157
[18]
Figure 15-16-17 shows three images of the ‘Low
How can we propel this building into the
space for the new elements, which have been
Drag GT’. The aim of these images is to explain
twenty-second century? Firstly, by restoring
designed to signal and effect change! To reflect
the transformation concept in an analogy
the exhibition hall back into its original
the new spirit of age and the future of mobility
between the building and the car. Essentially, the
condition. To once again show its dimensions
while, at the same time, retaining the three-
Low Drag GT is a car with modern technology
and impressive structure. Yet, at the same
dimensional record and maintaining a degree
beneath a classic-looking body from a sixties
time, to use the exhibition hall in a new way,
of history. Rejuvenating the existing halls, while
E-type. This is, in essence, the transformation
by implementing annual installations in this
maintaining their industrial legacy and spatial
concept for Citroën Yser. Modern architectural
stunning ‘cathedral’, dedicated to electric cars.
qualities. Both a continuation and change. A
elements inserted into a breathtakingly classiclooking building.
venue of experience and exhibitions, above the Secondly, the enormous workshop connected
home of research and production.
to the showroom: this workshop has the As architects, we can help divide, keep and
same dimensions and impressive structure as
Expressed as a whole, the combined components
transform our industrial heritage buildings. We
the exhibition hall. A cloisters-like corridor
of the Future Mobility Center: the old Citroën
also have the ability to decide what not to do.
connects the north entrance with the showroom.
Yser and the new elements, now come together
Over the past 85 years, Citroën Yser has been
The east and west entrances are connected in
as one functional and cultural and commercial
subjected to several transformations. It has
the same way, by a perfectly formed corridor. By
whole.
filled since 1933. The glory days of the thirties
preserving these two corridors, three ‘perfect’
and forties are now long-gone.
quadrangles arise. These are removed, to make
Elements
158
[19]
Functions
‘Window into the future’ 159
Mobility Connectivity Community Exposition space Experience center
Tower Panorama view Restaurant Club ‘Electric’ Data space High-end office Design Studio
Research & Development Office: 120 Flex work places Meeting rooms Presentation space
Automobile circulation
Production 4 Assembly lines Storage space Loading docks
Conference Conference room +/- 300 Attendants Automobile podium Foyer
Research & Development Facilities Toilets Elevators Escape routes
Showroom Sale Expo
Labs: Environmental testing Climate tests Driver enhancements Intelligent mobility [20]
The structure of the building consists of a range
hovers between the buildings. Each quarter is
the two directions of the canal. The new ‘icon’
of functions that are distributed in the former
deepened to house the function of ‘production’
of the Future Mobility Center serves as the
Citroen workshop hall. The hall is subdivided in
and ‘physical research’.
In each quarter, a
main circulation hub in the arrangement. On
three quarters by the two leading and preserved
building object and program is situated, that
top of the circulation, a commercial program
corridors. The prior connecting function
is accessible through one of the corridors. At
is positioned, which provides a good view over
between all buildings is the track, which
the edge of the building plot, the tower faces
one of the most congested city in the world
Track
160
[21]
The prior connecting function between all parts
attract both destination - as well as random
track is always around the corner. Spatial in a
of the building is the race and test rack, that
and accidental visitors it demands a ‘powerful
sensational way. An unfolding journey.
‘hovers’ in space. A path through and around
element of experience’. Visitors can experience
Racing has made innovations possible for
spaces and volumes of the building designed
the testing in and off the track. See it, smell it,
vehicles for the last 100 years. A platform and
with the aim to offer an aesthetic experience.
‘hear it’, feel it. By connecting the track to all
evolutionary path. On to the next 100 years
As it is the Future Mobility Center aim to
buildings, through, under or over them. The
Pedestrian walkway
161
Walkway conference entrance escalator
Walkway main entrance elevator
[22]
The second connection between all elements in
The walkway is an internal public space inside
left bottom corner. Thereby connecting the
the complex is the pedestrian walkway, hovering
the different buildings. And an external public
‘Window into the future‘ building, the Research
and just crossing above the track.
space between the buildings, connecting them,
and Development office and the tower.
It connects the conference hall, ‘R&D’ office,
with a splendid view on the test track. The
By crossing the bridge from one building to
showroom, the tower and the exhibition and
pedestrian walkway is reached by the escalators
another, visitors are always confronted with
experience ‘Window into the Future’ building.
in the conference center or the elevators in the
other activities taking place.
Production & Labs
162
5 assembly lines for concepts, prototypes and pre-production
loading dock
Battery lab Emission lab Acoustic lab Climate lab
Facilities Toilets Facilities
Elevators Escape routes
Toilets Elevators Escape routes [23]
The production on the lower floor of the
and development in the field of future mobility
intelligent mobility. Two blocks of facility are
building houses the production of prototypes,
to come closer to our aim of making electric
added to the plan, to provide toilets, showers,
concepts, pre-series and student projects from
and autonomous mobility part of our everyday
elevators and escape routes, on top of the
universities.
lives. In the labs different activities can be
facilities in the WITF, office and Conference
The lab makes it possible for both academia,
tested: battery experiments, environmental
Center.
governance and industry to intensify research
testing, climate tests, driver enhancements and
Urban
163
Entrance Quai de la Voirie
Entrance cars Quai de Péniches
Entrance cars Quai de Willebroeck
Charging stations Main entrance Place de l’Yser
[24]
The inner street is connected to the road
the historic city centre of Brussels. The opposite
the levels -1 and 0. Members of the conference
network of Brussels. A place to charge you
entrance is located at the Quai de la Voirie,
joining the lecture, enter the conference room
electric car. The public route crosses underneath
adjoining the ‘Northern Quarter, Brussels’
on the third level. They experience an inner
the inner road to separate the pedestrians and
Business district.
view of the cars racing behind the retractable
electric cars. The main entrance is located in the
The Conference Center can be reached by the
glass doors, as a decor, or to open and welcome
exhibition hall at the Place de l’Yser, adjacent to
escalators which connect to the inner street on
the cars of the future through the doors into the
Total
164
[25]
conference room.
The Exhibition and Experience Center consists
track or a view overlooking the whole complex.
The third level of the office block is cut open
of four L-shaped floors, where every exhibition
The combined elements of the Future Mobility
to connect to the public walkway, in this way it
floor is turned 90 degrees to take the visitor on
Center, old and new, to be expressed as a whole,
creates a resting point to overlook the complex,
a (manufacturing like) tour to the top of the
to have them come together as one. City of
and a close view on the track, which runs
building. Every floor of the building has its own
experience, exhibition and excitement above the
through the middle of the office.
outside space for a close by view on the test
city of production and research.
Tower & Roof
Tower panorama view restaurant club electric
‘WITF’ quarter
165
EFTE-roof design Steel girders
office storage design studio
circulation
‘Conference’ quarter
‘R&D’ quarter
Polycarbonate roofing sheet Steel girders
Steel lamellae Glass panels
[26]
The tower acts as billboard, casts a shadow to
offices, storage space for the data that is gathered
to an image of a factory. A factory once was a
feel the Future Mobility Centers’ presence in
in the Center, and a design studio, where light
manifestation, celebrating technology in the
Brussels. It accommodates a panorama view,
casts from all angles. The base of the tower acts
modern age. In the new age, the tower portrays
restaurant and a club, named ‘electric‘, thereby
as the main circulation for all vehicles that are
an image of a 21st century factory, with a
turning the center into a 24hr economy.
moving throughout the Center. The Future
reference to the factories in the spirit of the age
Furthermore it consists of high-end rental
Mobility Center should have a resemblance
of industrial revolution.
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[27] Buildings
[28] Pedestrian walkway
167
[29] Test track
CIRCULATION
RESTAURANT
CLUB PANORAMA
BILLBOARD OFFICE $$$
STORAGE
LOADING
PRODUCTION EXPERIENCE PUBLIC LOOKOUT
WINDOW INTO THE FUTURE
PUBLIC LOOKOUT
OFFICE R&D
STUDIO SPACE
[30] Program
WORKSHOPS
LABS
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169
PA RT FO U R TH E R E S U LTS
170
171
Future Mobility Center
172
173
Future Mobility Center - East West Corridor
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
Basement - Scale 1:250
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UP
185
UP
Ground floor - Scale 1:250
186
187
Level 11m. - Scale 1:250
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189
Elevation Nor th West - Scale 1:250
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191
CON TR ACK FE R E NCE
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Track
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‘TESLA CURVE‘ 75 km/h +2
‘TURN AROUND‘ 30 km/h
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+1 +3
60 km/h
‘SHOW US WHAT YOU GOT ‘ 65 km/h 0
‘CATHEDRAL STRAIGHT‘ up-to 160 km/h
Track Layout
80 km/h +1
195
‘THE CHICANE MAZE‘ +0.5
+2.5
‘START / FINISH‘
‘ELECTRIC CURVE‘ 40 km/h +0 +3
+3
‘THE NICOLA STRAIGHT’ 110 km/h
‘200 STRAIGHT‘ up-to 180 km/h
‘SWING BY THE OFFICE‘ 40 km/h
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197
CON FERR E NCE TOWE
198
A xonometric view
199 66800
62500
57500
52500 51000
47500
42500
37500
32500
27500
22500
17500
10500
7000
3500
0
-4500 -4500
Scale 1:400
200
201
Restaurant Tower
202
A xonometric view - construc tion
Technical space
66.5m
Panorama
62.5m
Restaurant
57.5m
Facilities
54.5m
Club ‘ELECTRIC’
47.5m
Office
42.5m
Storage
37.5m
Office
32.5m
Storage
27.5 m
Design Studio
21.5m
A xonometric view - construc tion
203
204
205
Tower at night
206
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WIN DOW INTO TH E FUTU RE CON FE R E NCE
208
A xonometric view - Level 1
A xonometric view - Level 2
209
A xonometric view - Level 3
A xonometric view - Level 4
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211
Window into the Future
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A xonometric view - Construc tion ‘ Window into the Future’ building
213
214
215
CON FE R E NCE
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A xonometric view - Level 0
217
A xonometric view - Level 1
A xonometric view - Level 2
218
219
Conference Center
220
221
CON FE R E NCE R&D
222
A xonometric view - Level 1
A xonometric view - Level -1
223
A xonometric view - Level 2
A xonometric view - Level 3
224
225
Conference Center
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227
SHOWROOM
228
A xonometric view - installation possibilities
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A xonometric view - installation possibilities
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Showroom
232
REFLECTION
Eleven months ago, January 2017 seemed so far away. Yet, here we are. And I’m delighted, and relieved to be presenting you my graduation project. The first semester of my master’s programme offered the opportunity of studying the phenomena ‘transformation’, ‘industrial site’ and ‘cultural identity’ in an architectural context. This research project has taken me to truly amazing Citroën Yser showroom & workshop in Brussels. It did not take long to find a main cause: E-mobility. The function of my building has been derived from its history, its context and its hardware. This history has continued in the spirit of André Citroën, one of most innovate carmakers of the nineteen sixties. The proposed transformation is an addition to the city, rather than in competition with the existing buildings of Brussels. The ‘hardware’ is closely related to the car, and constructed specifically with this in mind. Over recent decades, mobility has experienced enormous transformations.
233
& CONCLUSION
Currently, it affects considerable numbers
manufacturing facility, and its latest state.
Both the programme of the building and the
of people worldwide, in both a positive and
Making the building both a ‘factory’ and
proposed design solutions embrace theories
negative way, posing the question of how can
‘cultural venue’.
by the Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier
we show and enable people to experience their future of mobility.
concerning the ‘carchitectural promenade’: To what extent is it possible to create a cultural
incorporate the path of the car into the
venue in this way?
Activities in a cultural
architectural circulation and his desire to
In my search for the answer, I examined the
city range from conception, to production,
implement carmakers’ technology into his
current culture of e-mobility. The result has
to consumption. The Future Mobility Center
buildings. The proposed design of ‘the track’
been the discovery of a surprising refreshing
is, in essence, a small cultural city, covering
resembles the Fiat Lingotto Factory in Turin.
combination of emotions.
e-mobility from its conception, through its
The track is trying to live up to the celebration
production, to its consumption.
of speed and dynamism from the nineteen
The arguments in favour of e-mobility show
twenties. A path through, and around spaces
an image of emotional desires; love and
Is this building a factory? The function of a
and volumes of the building, designed with
enthusiasm. People are excited about their
building type that once was thriving in its
the aim of offering an exciting experience. An
electric cars. The environmental cause functions
innovation, now needs to be reconsidered.
element of thrill. An element of beauty.
in the background, while institutions and
Bringing the cycle of manufacturing and
governance focus mainly on the green benefits
consuming back into the city centre. The Center
The Future Mobility Center has been designed
of electric cars.
represents the ‘consumption of production’. The
to act as an important societal link, reflecting
building thus engages with the public regarding
our current culture of e-mobility and at the
This melting pot of ideals, policy, culture and
manufacture, by displaying its manufacturing
same time, giving visitors and users a glimpse
emotions resulted in the desire to design a
process. It is a city centre building, a cultural
of what lies ahead: for them and for society. The
Future Mobility Center: a building typology in
monument and a car production plant.
building celebrates both the opportunities and
which the public meets the actual e-mobility
the challenges that lie ahead.
234
235
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
There are some people to whom I wish to express my gratitude. This graduation project would not have turned out as it has without their contributions. My graduation Tutors; David Gianotten, Maarten Willems & Barbara Kuit, for sharing their valuable thoughts within this graduation studio. My fellow students in this graduation studio, who helped me see clear, laugh, drink, cry and progress at times it seemed impossible. My architecture study friends who have been there during my study, and I hope to keep on seeing, practising architecture. My parents, whom always supported me, during my architectural education at the Eindhoven University of Technology.
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PA RT F I V E SO U RC E S
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Notes
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PART ONE - RESEARCH 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38.
Bollack, F. (2015) Old Buildings, New Forms. Van Schaik (2015) With Love, Gerard & Anton. Bollack, F. (2015) Old Buildings, New Forms. Koolhaas, R. (2015). Rem Koolhaas on Prada, Preservation, Art and Architecture. TICCIH (2006) The Nizhny Tagil charter for the industrial heritage. TICCIH (2006) The Nizhny Tagil charter for the industrial heritage. BOEI. (2016) Industrieel Erfgoed. TICCIH (2006) The Nizhny Tagil charter for the industrial heritage. Encyclo. (2016) ‘Industrieel erfgoed’. TICCIH (2006) The Nizhny Tagil charter for the industrial heritage. Koolhaas, R. (2014) 2014 Venice Biennale. Van de Weijer, B. (2016, October 13) De Snoek van onze tijd. De Volkskrant. Van de Weijer, B. (2016, October 13) De Snoek van onze tijd. De Volkskrant. Purba, N. (2016) Movement disrupted. Purba, N. (2016) Movement disrupted. Purba, N. (2016) Movement disrupted. Will, G. (2016) Can automakers redefine mobility again? Shahan, Z. (2014) The Other #1 Reason Why Electric Cars Will Dominate The Car Market. Tesla Owner (2014) Tesla Customer stories. Tesla Owner (2014) Tesla Customer stories. Seba, T. (2016) Electric vehicles will soon be cheaper than regular cars because maintenance costs are lower, says Tony Seba. Tesla Owner (2014) Tesla Customer stories. Gibson, C. (2016) Why do they love electric cars in the Arctic Circle. Tesla Owner (2014) Tesla Customer stories. Shahan, Z. (2014) The Other #1 Reason Why Electric Cars Will Dominate The Car Market. Bayley, S. (1987) Sex, Drink and Fast Cars. Le Corbusier (1927) Toward a New Architecture. Le Corbusier (1927) Toward a New Architecture. Amado, A. (2011) Voiture Minimum. Le Corbusier (1927) Toward a New Architecture. Banham, R. (1960) Theory and Design in the First Machine age. Glancey, J. (2002) The Guardian: Dream Factory. Bisset, C. (2015) Iconic Buildings: Fiat Factory, Lingotto. Bisset, C. (2015) Iconic Buildings: Fiat Factory, Lingotto Abel, C. (1991) Renault Centre, Swindon 1982, Architect: Norman Foster. Abel, C. (1991) Renault Centre, Swindon 1982, Architect: Norman Foster. Levete, A. (2016) Zaha Hadid’s BMW Central Building is “a radical piece of thinking,” says Amanda Levete. Saarinen, A (1962) Eero Saarinen on His Work.
PART TWO - INQUIRY 1.
Vermeersch, L. (2014) Five reasons Belgium has the worst traffic in Europe.
Images & Illustrations
PART ONE - RESEARCH 1.
2. 3.
4.
5. 6. 7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
Skyline Brussel from the Place Poelaert. Retrieved December 12, 2016, from https://yvanderkimpen.com/gallery/bxl/ brussels/ HemelsBrussel. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from http://bruciel.brussels/# - Citroën Yser meets Goodwood. September 1, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. - Goodwood Sculpture. Retrieved August 31, 2016, from https://thedrivenblog.files. wordpress.com/2013/07/p1080382-001.jpg Wrapped German Cars I. Retrieved November 22, 2016, from https://s3-euwest-1.amazonaws.com/surfaceview/ images/3399/original/TRU0099_ websource.jpg?1391797195 Scale. April 20, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Illustration - Type of E-Mobility. June 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Stitched Panorama. Retrieved December 20, 2016, from http://youllmissme.com/ interviews/victor-enrich/ Methods of achieving links between old and new- Françoise Astorg Bollack. Bollack, F. A. (2000). Old Buildings New Forms, New directions in architectural transformations. New York: The Monacelli Press. Absorbing Modernity Courtesy of la Biennale di Venezia. Retrieved May 5, 2016, from http://www.archdaily. com/568233/reflections-on-the-2014venice-biennale Citroën Yser Brussels. Retrieved July 27, 2016, from http://www.ac-good.com/ tractionavant1934/index_fichiers/garage_ bruxelles.html André Citroën. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from http://www.carmagazine. co.uk/features/top-10s/the-car-top-10-carbosses-fired-from-their-own-companies/ Citroën Traction Avant. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from http://www. carstyling.ru/en/car/1934_citroen_ traction_avant/images/1023/Citroën Citroën Traction Avant. Retrieved
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
September 28, 2016, from http://www. carstyling.ru/en/car/1934_citroen_ traction_avant/images/1023/ Citroën Yser. Retrieved December 29, 2016, from http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Citroën Yser. Retrieved December 29, 2016, from http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 21, 2016, from https://www.citroen-forum.nl/ forums/viewthread/214473/ Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 27, 2016, http://www.ac-good.com/ tractionavant1934/index_fichiers/garage_ bruxelles.html Citroën Yser. Retrieved December 29, 2016, from http://www.gvw-photos.com/ architecture-gallery?lightbox=i01ha8 Citroën Yser. Retrieved December 29, 2016, from http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 21, 2016, from https://www.citroen-forum.nl/ forums/viewthread/214473/ Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants Citroën Traction Avant. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from http://www. carstyling.ru/en/car/1934_citroen_ traction_avant/images/1023/ Citroën DS. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from https://blog.hemmings.com/index. php/2013/07/25/cars-of-futures-pastcitroen-ds/ Tesla Model S. Retrieved January 03, 2017, from https://www.tesla.com/en_CA/ preowned/5YJSA1H19EFP51471 E-Mobility for kids. Retrieved November 8, 2016, from http://tesla.radioflyer.com/ build.html Fifth Avenue Easter Parade. Retrieved January 2, 2017, from https://www. inmotionventures.com/movementdisrupted/
27. Fifth Avenue Easter Parade. Retrieved January 2, 2017, from https://www. inmotionventures.com/movementdisrupted/ 28. Illustration - Demand for E-Mobility. June 15, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. Based on data retrieved from, Future of Highways. Arup, 2014. 29. Illustration - Significance of E-Mobility. June 15, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. Based on data retrieved from, http://www.bp.com/, http://www.epa.gov/, http://evsroll.com/Car_pollu9on_facts. html 30. Illustration - Stakeholders. June 4, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen 31. Illustration - Concept E-Mobility. June 14, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen 32. Top Gear. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=5gFGX43vubM&t=265s 33. Villa Stein-de-Monzie. Retrieved November 8, from Fondation Le Corbusier. 34. Vers une Architecture. Retrieved October 19, 2016, from https://www.studyblue. com/notes/note/n/modern-postmodernarch-midterm1/deck/11251593 35. Maison Citrohan. Retrieved January, 2017, from http://blog.lindsaycars.com/ wordpress/?p=4142 36. Villa Savoye Voisin. Retrieved November 8, 2016, from http:// patrimoineautomobile.com/le-corbusieren-voisin-lumineuse/ 37. Villa Savoye Voisin. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://buylesschoosewell.com/ le-coupe-renault-corbusier-a-la-villasavoye/ 38. Pavillon de Suisse Voisin. Retrieved October 19, 2016, from https://www. studyblue.com/notes/note/n/architecturebuildings-2/deck/12714538 39. Le Corbusier and his Voisin. Retrieved October 19, 2016 from http://www. peugeotforum.nl/phpBB/viewtopic. php?t=3763&p=278394 40. Vers une Architecture. Retrieved October 19, 2016, from https://www.studyblue. com/notes/note/n/modern-postmodern-
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arch-midterm1/deck/11251593 41. Vers une Architecture. Retrieved October 19, 2016, from https://www.studyblue. com/notes/note/n/modern-postmodernarch-midterm1/deck/11251593 42. Cover Typological Research: Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 17, 2016, from https://www.flickr.com/photos/ fotoraffo/3144253708 43. - Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 17, 2016, from http://www.bbc.com/autos/ story/20140825-a-racetrack-in-the-sky - Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 18, 2016, from https://racingnews.co/2015/12/31/ automotive-factory-rooftop-test-track/ - Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 17, 2016, from http://www.bbc.com/autos/ story/20140825-a-racetrack-in-the-sky - Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 18, 2016, from http://www.bbc.com/autos/ story/20140825-a-racetrack-in-the-sky - Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 18, 2016, from http://www.bbc.com/autos/ story/20140825-a-racetrack-in-thesky 44. Fagus-Werke - Walter Gropius. Retrieved October 27, 2016, from, https:// de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fagus-Werk 45. Illustration Lingotto Factory Concept. July 20, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 46. Le Corbusier on the rooftop track. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from https://rosswolfe.files.wordpress. com/2013/05/le-corbusier-fiat-lingotto12. jpg 47. Rooftop track Lingotto Factory. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://lh6.ggpht. com/ 48. Rooftop track Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 18, 2016 from http://note.taable. com/post/CC1/feedproxy.google.com/~r/ amusingplanet/~3/Vqpsc2V4EWM/therooftop-racetrack-of-fiats-lingotto.html October 24, 2016, from http://lh6.ggpht. com/ 49. Rooftop track Lingotto Factory. Retrieved July 18, 2016, from http://www.bbc.com/ autos/story/20140825-a-racetrack-in-thesky 50. Assenvaux Imperia. Retrieved October
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25, 2016, from http://petrolicious.com/ another-rooftop-track-emerges-inbelgium Assenvaux Imperia. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from http://petrolicious.com/ another-rooftop-track-emerges-inbelgium Assenvaux Imperia. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from http://petrolicious.com/ another-rooftop-track-emerges-inbelgium El Palacio Chrysler. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from http://www.taringa.net/ post/autos-motos/12754510/El-PalacioChrysler.html El Palacio Chrysler. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from http://www.taringa.net/ post/autos-motos/12754510/El-PalacioChrysler.html El Palacio Chrysler. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from http://wikimapia.org/430654/ es/Palermo-Chico El Palacio Chrysler. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from http://wikimapia.org/430654/ es/Palermo-Chico Construction principle. Retrieved October 24, 2016, John Hewitt Construction principle. Retrieved October 24, 2016, John Hewitt Construction. Retrieved October 24, from, http://www.fosterandpartners.com/ projects/renault-distribution-centre/ Construction. Retrieved October 24, from, http://www.fosterandpartners.com/ projects/renault-distribution-centre/ Renault Centre. Retrieved October 24, from, http://www.fosterandpartners.com/ projects/renault-distribution-centre/ Renault Centre. Retrieved January 4, 2016, from http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/ uk-news/james-bond-warehouse-getslisted-2286875 BMW Central building plan. Retrieved July 12, 2016, from http://www.zahahadid.com/architecture/bmw-centralbuilding/ BMW cb interior. Retrieved July 12, 2016, from http://www.zaha-hadid.com/ architecture/bmw-central-building/ BMW cb interior. Retrieved July 12,
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2016, from http://www.zaha-hadid.com/ architecture/bmw-central-building/ BMW Cb interior. Retrieved July 12, 2016, from http://www.zaha-hadid.com/ BMW Cb exterior. Retrieved July 12, 2016, from http://www.zaha-hadid.com/ Lobby. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from http://zona-rapida.blogspot. nl/2016/04/gm-technical-center-dondeel-hoy.html Dome. Retrieved October 26, 2016, from http://andoniscars.blogspot. nl/2012/06/legend-called-gm-design. html#axzz4UmqB0gyP Water tower. Retrieved October 26, 2016, from http://photo.sf.co.ua/g/295/6.jpg Entrance. Retrieved December 30, 2016, http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8xUXd5e9p-g/ Tt6U8xgQBcI/AAAAAAAABw0/5L-N_ Jr12dw/s1600/10018b.jpg
PART TWO - INQUIRY 1.
2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
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Cover Brussels: Schwarzplan Brussels. November 8, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Illustration Statistics Europe. January 2, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Illustration Europe. January 2, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Illustration Overview Brussels. December, 22, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Illustration statistics Brussels, January 2, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen - Grote markt Brussels. Retrieved August 31, 2016, from https://nl.wikipedia.org/ wiki/Grote_Markt_(Brussel) - Business quarter Brussels. Retrieved September, 28, 2016, from http://www. interbuild.be/fr/projecten/renovationde-bureaux/ - Schwarzplan Brussels. November 8, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Illustration Distance. January 3, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Morphology Brussels. December 12, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen - Illustration Aerial location. December 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. - Aerial photo. Retrieved September 25,
2016 from, http://bruciel.brussels/ 10. Aerial photos 1933-2015. Retrieved July 26, 2016 from http://bruciel.brussels/ 11. Aerial photos 1933-2015. Retrieved July 26, 2016 from http://bruciel.brussels/ 12. - Illustration before construction. November 18, 2016. Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen - Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants 13. Illustration location 1933. November 18, 2016. Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen - Aerial photo. Retrieved September 25, 2016 from http://bruciel.brussels/ 14. Illustrations 3D-view. September 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen - Aerial 3D-view. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from google.com/maps 15. Illustrations 3D-view. September 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen - Aerial 3D-view. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from google.com/maps 16. Illustrations 3D-view. September 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Aerial 3D-view. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from google.com/maps 17. Illustrations 3D-view. September 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen Aerial 3D-view. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from google.com/maps 18. - Illustration Aerial location. December 25, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 19. Illustration Districts. July 26, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 20. Illustration Subway. July 27, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 21. Illustration Main roads. July 27, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 22. Aerial view area. Retrieved August 21, 2016, from http://www.brusselsfromabove. be/#s=pano236 23. Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 26, from, http://docomomo.be/nl-citroengaragehet-museum-voorbij/ 24. Advertisement Citroën Yser. Retrieved July 26, from, http://docomomo.be/nlcitroengarage-het-museum-voorbij 25. Cover design. Retrieved July 27,
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from, http://www.ac-good.com/ tractionavant1934/index_fichiers/garage_ bruxelles.html Original drawing. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants At night. Retrieved July 21, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/LouisDebruyne/ presentatie-thomas-stroobants Construction Exhibition. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from, http://s96.photobucket. com/user/bxsport_2006/library/ Construction Exhibition. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from, http://s96.photobucket. com/user/bxsport_2006/library/ Construction. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Construction. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Construction. Retrieved December 29, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Construction. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from, http://s96.photobucket.com/user/ bxsport_2006/library/ Citroën Exhibition hall. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from http://www. dssmclub.be/LinkClick. 2CV. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/multimedia/ fotospecials/6033-citroen-yser 2CV & Helicopter. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser 2CV & Helicopter. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Storage hall. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/ multimedia/fotospecials/6033-citroenyser Hall during construction. Retrieved
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December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55. mobi/multimedia/fotospecials/6033citroen-yser Spare parts warehouse. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55. mobi/multimedia/fotospecials/6033citroen-yser Assembly. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55.mobi/multimedia/ fotospecials/6033-citroen-yser Viaduct Koekelberg. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://www.bruzz.be/nl/ nieuws/viaduct-van-koekelberg-wordtgerenoveerd-bangkok Exhibition hall 1970s. Retrieved December 30, 2016, from, http://auto55. mobi/multimedia/fotospecials/6033citroen-yser Exhibition hall 1930s. Retrieved July 26, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants Exhibition hall today. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net Corridor. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://architizer.com/blog/howan-architects-self-published-bookcan-change-the-fate-of-a-modernistmasterpiece/ Corridor. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://architizer.com/blog/howan-architects-self-published-bookcan-change-the-fate-of-a-modernistmasterpiece/ Exhibition hall at night. Retrieved July 21, 2016, from http://s96.photobucket.com/ user/bxsport_2006/media/Yser.jpg.html Canal side 1990s. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from http://www.skyscrapercity.com/ showthread.php?p=113890968 Canal side 2000s. Retrieved July, 22, 2016, from http://www.bmabru.be/ Other side of the canal. Retrieved July 26, 2016, from http://www.skyscrapercity. com/showthread.php?p=113890968 Plan 1933. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/LouisDebruyne/ presentatie-thomas-stroobants Exhibition hall construction. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.
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net/LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants Build-up. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/LouisDebruyne/ presentatie-thomas-stroobants Construction principle. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants Comparison 1. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants Comparison 2. Retrieved July 22, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants Cover Inquiry Construction of Cars: Jaguar E-type. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://fabianoefner. com/?portfolio=disintegrating Chassis Monocoque. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from, http://special.porsche. com/ Skateboard. Retrieved January 3, 2017. from http://newatlas.com/jaguar-i-paceconcept-ev/46436/ Ladder chassis. Retrieved October 26, 2016, from https://commons.wikimedia. org/wiki/File:Napier_rolling_chassis.jpg SSB. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://www.alcoa.com/car_truck/en/ images/audi_1.jpg SSB Aluminium. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://www.astonmartin. com/cars/the-new-vanquish/vanquishtechnical Tube frame. Retrieved October 24, 2016, from http://www.vp-racecars.com/images/ chassis/chassis1.jpg Cover Program. Retrieved December 26, 2016, from http://www.bmwmagazine. com/int/en Illustration programmatic possibilities. May 10, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. Illustration programmatic concept. June 4, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. Illustration programmatic concept. August 24, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen.
69. Illustration Program. August 30, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 70. Illustration Track & Program. September 18, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 71. Illustration WITF. August 28, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 72. WITF. July 18, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 73. Connectivity. July 18, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 74. Mobility. July 18, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 75. Community. July 19, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 76. BMW Track on 1933 plan. September 4, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 77. Relation to track. October 27, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. PART THREE - DESIGN 1.
Collage. July 8, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 2. Transformation strategies. August 30, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 3. Transformation strategies. August 30, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 4. Early studies. September 9, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 5. Diagrams of concept & program. June 4, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 6. Diagrams of program planning. June 4, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 7. Concept. August 21, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 8. Various diagrams. July 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 9. Type of E-mobility. August 29, 2016. Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 10. Cutaway CitroĂŤn DS. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from http://tech-racingcars. wikidot.com/citroen-ds23-fg 11. Original drawing. Retrieved September 28, 2016, from http://fr.slideshare.net/ LouisDebruyne/presentatie-thomasstroobants 12. Cutaway BMW i3. Retrieved January 4, 2017, from http://www.driversmagazine. com/2017-bmw-i3-revamped-versionmight-released-next-year/
13. FMC. September 28, 2016. Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 14. Building. January 5, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 15. Low Drag GT. Retrieved January 5, 2017, from http://www.eaglegb.com/52/eaglelow-drag-gt/outcome 16. Low Drag GT. Retrieved January 5, 2017, from http://www.eaglegb.com/52/eaglelow-drag-gt/outcome 17. Low Drag GT. Retrieved January 5, 2017, from http://www.eaglegb.com/52/eaglelow-drag-gt/outcome 18. Transformation. January 6, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 19. Elements. January 5, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 20. Functions. January 4, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 21. Track. January 4, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 22. Pedestrian Walkway. January 4, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 23. Production & Labs. January 6, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 24. Urban. January 6, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 25. Total. January 6, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 26. Roof. January 5, 2017, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 27. Buildings. December 12, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 28. Pedestrian walkway. December 12, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 29. Test track. December 12, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen. 30. Program. December 12, 2016, Graphics by Luuk van den Elzen.