City: Copenhagen
Location: Orestaden
Country: Denmark
Design: BIG Architects
Total area : 33.000 square metres (floor area)
Completed: 2008
The residents of the 80 apartments will be the first in Orestaden to
have the possibility of parking directly outside their homes. The gigantic
parking area contains 480 parking spots and a sloping elevator that moves along
the mountain’s inner walls. In some places the ceiling height is up to 16
meters which gives the impression of a cathedral-like space.
The parking
area needs to be connected to the street, and the homes require sunlight, fresh
air and views, thus all apartments have roof gardens facing the sun, amazing
views and parking
on the 10th floor. The Mountain Dwellings appear as a suburban neighbourhood of
garden homes flowing over a 10-storey building – suburban living with urban
density.
Mountain’s formal conjecture cuts to the core of Modernism’s default
rectangularity. A flat roof, it says, doesn’t satisfy contemporary needs. It
questions the rectangle’s ability to make all equal and also its ecological
performance. Mountain’s form in incredibly specific, but it’s strategies (roof
terraces and a stepped massing) are transferrable. Like Le Corbusier’s Unite
d’Habitation before it, Mountain makes a lifestyle rather than just a building,
its argument is green without being greenwash, a rethinking of typological
models rather than a reskinning with technology. It’s also cheeky. Denmark has
no mountains. A mountain lifestyle there is one so different it nearly
constitutes a category error. In order for the lifestlye to be transposed it
had to be simulated.