Land(e)scape Land(e)scape (1999), an architectural
installation by Finnish architects Casagrande & Rintala, with Marco Casagrande and
Sami Rintala, in a former
field in
Savonlinna. The work is commenting on the desertion process of the Finnish countryside. Three of these abandoned barns "were driven," the architects explained, "to the point where they have had to break their primeval union with the soil. Desolate, they have risen on their shanks and are swaying towards the cities of the south." The work was awarded in the
Architectural Review's Emerging Architecture 1999 competition and selected to the
Venice Biennale 2000. Land(e)scape launched the international career of Casagrande & Rintala.
Redrum Redrum (2003) is an
architectonic installation in
Anchorage Alaska by
Finnish architects
Casagrande & Rintala. The work is commissioned by Alaska Design Forum. 3
Alaska Railroad oil tanks cut into total 12 pieces and turned into a
temple structure opposite the Federal Building of Anchorage in the crossing of C-Street and 7th Avenue. The interior is painted bright red in contrast to the rusty and brutal exterior. The floor is made of 3500 kg of
oyster shells, the origin of all Alaskan oil. "Redrum" is "murder" backwards. The designers intended to comment on the connection of oil, war and environment. Local media described the piece as "a slap in the face to Alaskans".
Potemkin Potemkin is an architectural park by
Casagrande & Rintala for Kuramata village in Japan 2003. A steel made mix between a temple and machine. The work consists indoor and outdoor spaces for post-industrial meditation. Potemkin is commissioned by the
Echigo-Tsumari Contemporary Art Triennial 2003.
Potemkin stands as the Acropolis to be the post industrial temple to think of the connection between the modern man and nature. I see Potemkin as a cultivated junk yard situated between the ancient rice fields and the river with a straight axis to the Shinto temple. The site is a former illegal dumping ground turned into a riverside park. The architecture of the park was drawn on site in 1:1 scale on snow by walking the lines with snow-shoes and then built up when the snow melted. The park is made out of one inch thick Kawasaki steel and recycled urban and industrial waste. It is 130 meters long and 15 meters wide with a series of outdoor and indoor spaces.
Other works • 60 Minute Man, architectonic installation, Casagrande & Rintala, Venice Architecture Biennale 2000 •
50 meters long abandoned barge into which is planted an oak garden on top of 60 minutes worth of human waste produced by the city of Venice. • Uunisaari Summer Theatre, temporary architecture, Casagrande & Rintala, Helsinki Finland 2000 •
A temporary round theatre building on Suomenlinna -island outside of Helsinki. • 1000 White Flags, environmental art installation, Casagrande & Rintala, Koli Finland 2000 •
White flags out of used sheets from mental hospitals mounted on a downhill skiing range to cure the hill. •
Quetzalcoatlus, installation, Casagrande & Rintala, Havana Biennale 2000 •
A 300 kg iron bar stretched between two university building with 10 km of fishing line. •
Bird Hangar, architectonic installation, Casagrande & Rintala, Yokohama Triennial 2001 •
A re-bar and hemp rope silo releasing balsa birds attached to meteorological balloons carrying seeds of Japanese vegetables to the city. • Installation 1:2001, public installation, Casagrande & Rintala, Firenze Biennale 2001 •
A round wall of 15.000 political, philosophical and religious books from around the wall title backs out, white paper in. The work was originally intended to be installed in Cuba, but Government resistance forced the project to Italy. • Dallas-Kalevala, art journey, Casagrande & Rintala,
Demeter Environmental Art, Hokkaido Japan 2002 •
A land journey from Finland to Japan with car collecting polaroid photos of grandmothers, old axes and local radio sound. • Chain Reactor, architectonic installation, Casagrande & Rintala, Montreal Biennale 2002 •
A 6 x 6 x 6 meters cube of I-beams and recycled steel chain to frame a fire place. • Anarchist Gardener, performance art and installations, Puerto Rico Biennial 2002 •
A parade of an invented God to stop highway traffic in order to construct a series of industrial Zen gardens. • Floating Sauna, temporary architecture, Casagrande & Rintala, Rosendahl village Norway 2002 •
A floating transparent sauna in the end of a fjord as the public space of a fishing village. 6th Cycle of 20+10+X Architecture Awards winner. •
Treasure Hill, housing area restoration, Taipei Taiwan 2003 •
Ecological rehabilitation realization for an illegal housing area. • Post Industrial Fleet, naval architecture, CREW*31, Venice Architecture Biennale 2004 •
Architectonic recycling strategies for industrial ships out of duty. • Human Layer,
urban acupuncture, Greetings from London- Helsinki Festival - Taipei on the Move 2004 •
A series of urban acupuncture plans for the cities of London, Helsinki and Taipei. • Chamber of the Post-Urbanist 104, life style installation, Taipei Museum of Contemporary Art 2005 •
Steel made furniture for post urban cave man style living. • Future Pavilion, Taiwan Design Expo •
Cross disciplinary art-architecture exhibition in a ruin of Wei Wu Military Camp, Kaoshioung 2005 • CityZenGarden, installation, together with 3RW Architects, Venice Architecture Biennale 2006 •
Oriental stone garden out of recycled glass in the Venice prison. Video documentation of Taiwanese urban farmers. • Chen House, Datun Mountains, Taiwan. World Architecture Award 2009. •
Ruin is when man-made has become part of nature. With this house we were looking forward to design a ruin. • Bug Dome, WEAK! for SZHK Biennale 2009. •
Unofficial social club for illegal workers; insect architecture. •
Ruin Academy, Urban Core area in Taipei, Taiwan 2010. • ''Independent cross-over architectural research centre 'set to re-think the industrial city and the man in the box'.'' • Cicada, Taipei City, Taiwan 2011 •
Organic bamboo pavilion providing urban acupuncture to the surrounding industrial city. Red Dot Award 2012. •
Sandworm, Beaufort04 Triennial of
Contemporary Art,
Wenduine, Belgium 2012 •
Willow cathedral finely tuned to celebrate the site specific conditions of the Wenduine tidal beaches. Part architecture, part environmental art, the whole piece is made out of willow and uses what is described as "weak architecture". == References ==