No longer mine: Repurposing the Tuolluvaara mine
Publicerad
Författare
Typ
Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
Tidskriftstitel
ISSN
Volymtitel
Utgivare
Sammanfattning
Technological advances in the deindustrialization era have significantly
impacted the mining industry, whose legacy of environmental
degradation from excessive extraction still casts a shadow over many
places around the world. One such place is Kiruna, the backbone of
the thesis, where mining actions have led to the city’s partial relocation
of many remnants of great heritage value left behind – abandoned
mines. One notable example is the Tuolluvaara mine, which hosts two
rare mining towers that stand out due to their historical and visual significance.
This thesis explores the future role of the Tuolluvaara mine
in Kiruna, proposing a strategy for repurposing its premises.
This project follows the concept of continuity, based on the theory of
Solà-Morales, to prevent architectural practices from becoming an
aggressive act in the transformation of the postindustrial area. This
approach applies both to the transformation of buildings and the land
they occupy, paying attention to heritage and history. Grounded in
theories of abandoned and decayed architecture as palimpsest, terrain
vague and collective memory, the design becomes an interplay between
the past and the present. A phased transformation is developed
to ensure gradual public access and integration, using the concepts of
conversions for site’s premises alteration.
The design considers the significance of the heritage buildings, but
also the insignificance and instability of the ground that they are
standing on - a messy and haphazard result of the deposition of excavated
masses from previous mining activities as well as of the piling
up of the soil from the construction of Kiruna’s new city centre. The
project includes phytoremediation of the wasteland and separating
it from public access until it regenerates while the buildings present
on site are transformed into open-plan public spaces and adapted for
a multifunctional implementation called a rotational programme. In a
space defined by its users themselves, the architect’s task is to establish
a versatile framework capable of adapting to various scenarios as
a response to the constantly changing challenges of the city’s relocation.
The study proposes solutions created on the layered example of
Kiruna that could be applied to other cities facing similar challenges.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
Heritage, post-industrial landscape, adaptive reuse, transformation, mine