Sara Kulturhus is a mixed-use development that consists of a high-rise 20-storey hotel as well as a low-rise cultural centre. The exhibition “A Heart of Wood” not only provides insights into the innovative construction process, but also introduces the many social and cultural uses of this giant timber building.
The project turned from vision to reality in only five years. The exhibition follows the development from competition through production to the final result. And most of all: the installation is built from the same tree as the building.
Using drawings, models, photographs, and films, the themes are presented on expansive wooden walls. In total, 15 CLT elements built from 2.7 tonnes of wood have been used in the installation. The exhibition also includes an outdoor installation in front of the gallery, where we have created an inclusive meeting place where people can come together to talk, sit down, and share knowledge and ideas.
Practical info
“A Heart of Wood” White Arkitekter
January 14 – March 13, 2022
Jaroslav Fragner Gallery
Betlémské náměstí 5, Prague
Czech Republic
It is very valuable for us to exhibit our work at Aedes Berlin with its huge international network. We are simply reaching further with our ambition to share knowledge and lessons learned from this groundbreaking project while strengthening our presence in Germany where we have the ambition to build a strong climate-neutral portfolio, says Max Zinnecker, Architect and Project Manager for the exhibition.
The internationally active office White Arkitekter is dedicated to the renewable material wood and ecologically and socially sustainable architecture. In 2016, they designed a 20-storey building in Skellefteå in Sweden that will be one of the world’s tallest timber high-rise structures. Sara Kulturhus – a new cultural centre right in the core of the city combining theatre, museum, art gallery, public library, conference centre and hotel – opens this year. The building, designed to reduce embodied as well as operational carbon emissions, is mainly made of wood grown in the regional boreal forests. Solar panels and efficient energy systems further contribute to minimising the project’s climate footprint.
In 2016, White Arkitekter won the international design competition for the new cultural centre Sara Kulturhus in Skellefteå. The city is situated in the north of Sweden just below the Arctic Circle and has a long tradition of timber construction, which was the main source of inspiration for the competition proposal. White Arkitekter do not only create a new living room for the city’s inhabitants, but also a showcase for sustainable design.
With an elevation of almost 80 metres, Sara Kulturhus houses six theatre stages, the city library, two art galleries, and a hotel with 205 rooms, a conference centre, restaurants, sky bar, and spa. The 20-storey hotel offers dramatic views over Skellefteå.
Ensuring that Sara Kulturhus is an “arena” for all citizens regardless of their previous interest in culture, has been a central concern for the municipality, and a starting point for the design. The location of the building and the transparent façade with many entrances work together to lower the threshold to enter the building, and to replace the image of an austere cultural institution with an open and welcoming building. Sara Kulturhus is aimed to enrich the community and become a new destination attracting visitors regionally, nationally, and internationally – a showcase for sustainable design and construction where all forms of culture live side-by-side.
With Sara Kulturhus White Arkitekter aims to expand the application possibilities of wood as a construction material for complex high-rise buildings and to make progress in the field of sustainable construction. The diverse programme has called for a range of innovative solutions in solid wood construction to handle spans, flexibility, acoustics and overall statics. The hotel for example is built from prefabricated solid cross-laminated timber (CLT) volume modules stacked between two CLT lift cores. In contrast, the low-rise building is constructed with columns and beams of glulam and cores and shear walls of CLT. The architecturally integrated design allowed the load-bearing structure to be built entirely without concrete, speeding up construction time and drastically reducing the carbon footprint.
White Arkitekter was founded by Sidney White in 1951 and is one of Scandinavia’s leading architectural practices. The employee-owned collective of about 700 staff members works with sustainable architecture, urban design, landscape architecture and interior design for current and future generations. White’s mission is to enable sustainable life through the art of architecture, also with the vision that all its projects will be carbon neutral by 2030. The office has locations in Sweden, Norway, the UK, Germany, Canada and East Africa.