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Time for Play

The centrepiece of a new park in France is an interactive inverted ‘watchtower' pavilion that features a trampoline and mirror, providing a place for rest, socialisation, play and reflection on the surrounding landscape and nature.

Time for Play

Designed by Atelier Ari, Le Voyeur is an interactive pavilion that nestles in the middle of a large new park on the site of Europe’s former biggest coal mining factory in Drocourt, France. The pavilion creates a public place for the public to experience the surroundings, offering reflection on the post-industrial landscape, a place to rest, for families to come together, for children to play and for everyone to connect with nature by viewing it from different perspectives.

Le Voyeur works like an inverted watchtower. From an intimate, closed interior space, the object invites you to focus far outwards and observe the transformed landscape in a different way. Lying in the trampoline, people can observe the oval islands from a low point. Through a large mirror, the artificial lakes and the former slag heaps of the Parc Des Iles can be experienced and seen from above, allowing visitors an unexpected look inside.

Time for Play

The interior space and the people inside Le Voyeur become visible from afar, as they are reflected high above the ground in the large, oval mirror. The designed landscape with oval islands is visible from a higher perspective, appearing unexpectedly spectacular. The surrounding hills and the former slag heaps of the mining area also offer new views. Although those hills are not accessible to the public, Le Voyeur offers the visitor an alternative way to discover the landscape of islands from a refreshing perspective.

The round shape and the arched corners of the pavilion reference the demolished buildings in the historic mining landscape. The functional structures were designed as rich architectural pieces with special attention paid to detail and craft. In turn, Le Voyeur creates a link to these disappeared, beautiful installations that no longer serve their former purpose.

Time for Play

The six-metre-tall pavilion is made of a plywood structure that is slanted at the top. In the sloping plane, an oval aluminium mirror is placed in such an angle that the landscape can only be seen from inside the pavilion. The floor consists of a tightly stretched trampoline net, where visitors can lie down and experience the landscape in a comfortable yet playful way.

Le Voyeur is part of the Odyssée des Cabanes competition that invites artist and architects to build a temporary pavilion with the aim of promoting the transformed natural spaces of the Chaîne des Parcs area in northern France. The competition aims to highlight the industrial past of the UNESCO world heritage site and the transformed mining basin.

Time for Play

Via designboom | Images by Atelier Ari

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