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Firm: Matthijs la Roi
Type: Commercial › Exhibition Center Cultural › Memorial Museum Pavilion
STATUS: Concept
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Photos: Unknown (4)
‘Museum of Hospitality’ is a winning design proposal for the Belgian monument competition by London based Dutch architect, Matthijs la Roi. The museum will be built next to the current Belgian monument in the town of Amersfoort, Netherlands. The ambition of the museum is to enhance the current World War One monument into a symbol of hospitality for refugees in the Netherlands.
At the end of World War I, Belgium gifted a monument to the Netherlands in remembrance of the benevolent internment of Belgian soldiers during the war. Despite the fact that the monument is the largest of its kind in the Netherlands, its existence is relatively unknown by the Dutch citizens. The main reason is that the First World War barely lives in the Netherlands and is thus hardly remembered. It is practically forgotten that one million Belgians fled to neutral Netherlands at the beginning of the war in 1914.
The ‘Museum of Hospitality’ acts as an exhibition pavilion next to the current monument. It tells the story of the Belgian refugees during World War I with the intention of drawing parallels to today’s refugee crisis as well. It will stand as a reminder to future generations of the importance of providing hospitality to those in need.
Two masses come together in unity to form one pavilion. Each of the masses hosts a small exhibition space. The first exhibition will tell the story of the Belgian refugee crisis in the Netherlands during World War I. The second space will exhibit the 100 years of refugee hospitality in the Netherlands from World War I and onwards.
The building’s form is based on a contemporary interpretation of the ‘Amsterdam style’ of the existing monument. Plasticity of masses was an essential attribute of this style. The new pavilion is composed out of dynamic masses evoking movement and pliancy, whereas the existing monument is a vertical composition. The two, existing and new, will be tied together through materiality as they both use the same brick and limestone.
The museum is scheduled to be constructed by 2019.