Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway

An international team of young architects based in Copenhagen have won first prize for their proposal ‘Finnskogens Hus’ in a competition for a new Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Svullrya, Norway.

The fourth largest architectural competition in Norway, the new museum aims to inform and educate visitors about the Forest Finns, Finnish migrants who settled in Swedish and Norwegian forests in the late 16th to 17th centuries.

Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - Image 2 of 7Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - ForestYoung Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - Wood, Column, Handrail, ForestYoung Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - More Images+ 2

The team’s proposal, ‘Finnskogens Hus’, is a museum in the forest. Surrounded by a forest of columns, it creates an interesting transition between the forest it sits within and the perimeter of the museum. The interaction between building and landscape, inside and outside, works together to present the history and culture of the Forest Finns. During the dark hours, the light from within the museum bleeds through the forest of columns and gently illuminates the surrounding woodland.

Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - Wood, Column, Handrail, Forest
Hide and Seek. Image Courtesy of Lipinsky Lasovsky Johansson
Site Plan

The entrance of the building appears as a glade through a thicket of columns, leading the visitor into the reception area, café and library. Once inside the museum, the columns are still present but more dispersed, and natural light is filtered through the ceiling, a reference to the Forest Finns building technique where smoke was ventilated out through a smoke hatch.

Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - Image 2 of 7
Inside the Museum. Image Courtesy of Lipinsky Lasovsky Johansson

The building itself holds many references to the culture of the Forest Finns, such as the primary building material being wood. Burnt wood is also used to tell a story about the slash-and-burn agricultural technique of the Forest Finns. The large gabled roof of the museum creates a link to the similarly gabled roofs of the surrounding buildings, while the plan of the building is straightforward and simple to ensure a clear circulation through the different sections of the museum. It is also designed to have the flexibility of extending the building through a second building phase.

Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway - Forest
View from Outside. Image Courtesy of Lipinsky Lasovsky Johansson

News via: LLJA.

Project gallery

See allShow less
About this office
Cite: Yiling Shen. "Young Architects Win First Prize for Museum of Forest Finn Culture in Norway" 17 Feb 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/889091/young-architects-win-first-prize-for-museum-of-forest-finn-culture-in-norway> ISSN 0719-8884

Exterior View. Image Courtesy of Lipinsky Lasovsky Johansson

年轻建筑师赢得挪威新森林芬兰人文化博物馆一等奖

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.