Lacaton & Vassal's FRAC Dunkerque is an Architectural Echo Both in Form and in Concept

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As industry has shifted over the past century, in format, location, and type, the manufacturing and industrial spaces scattered across the western world have been repurposed. You have no doubt seen these structures, though perhaps without realizing. The large windows, high ceilings, and open floor plans optimized for factory work now mark the territory of the “creative class”. Such spaces have been disproportionately appropriated by creative industries such as arts and architecture; think of Herzog + de Meuron’s renovation of the Tate Modern (from a former power station) or the recent collaborative transformation of a locomotive yard into a library in the Netherlands.

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FRAC Dunkerque / Lacaton & Vassal. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu
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Cite: Katherine Allen. "Lacaton & Vassal's FRAC Dunkerque is an Architectural Echo Both in Form and in Concept" 26 Feb 2019. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/911719/lacaton-and-vassals-frac-dunkerque-is-an-architectural-echo-both-in-form-and-in-concept> ISSN 0719-8884

FRAC Dunkerque / Lacaton & Vassal. Image © Laurian Ghinitoiu

Lacaton & Vassal 改造敦克尔克旧工业建筑,将历史与现代对接

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