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ORG Permanent Modernity

Brussels Market Building

© Filip Dujardin

ORG Permanent Modernity

The Brussels Market is located in an immigrant neighborhood, less than 2.5km (1.5mi) from Brussels Central train station. The project (226,000 ft2) includes industrial meat production facilities, various market stall types, logistics and parking spaces, and a large commercial roof farm (43,000 ft2) with related retail programs including a farm-to-table restaurant. The market building, opened in June 2015, is the first architectural step towards realizing the Meat Market District plan, which outlines the gradual conversion of an industrial slaughterhouse into a mixed-urban environment.
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A full-scale mock-up of the project’s wall system (‘platonic panels’), as well as a scaled model of the district master plan was featured as part of the Main Pavilion exhibition at the Venice Biennale (2016), expressing the project’s contribution as a “Monument for an Open Society.”

Formalizing the Informal
Give form, pride, and civic presence to communities that have until now operated in an informal, semi-hidden world. In other words, define an architecture that is independently proud and generous, but yet serves beyond itself.

Capital in Search of Identity
Capitals symbolically summarize the civilization that they politically represent. Brussels is dotted with monuments of the 18, 19, and 20th Century – nobility, bourgeoisie, and welfare state(s). Today, nearly 60% of Brussels’ inhabitants are foreign-born, and inequality is at an all-time high. Brussels struggles to define a common space of shared aspirations; a space that is not dependent on the aspirations or hegemony of one single sub-group within the multitude. Searching – struggling for a contribution to such a space, within the means of architecture and urbanism has been our battle.

Universalist Aspiration – The Monument
Adorno once wrote: “Architecture thinks better of people than they really are.” We strive for an architecture that is optimistic about the possibility of combining cultural pluralism with a claim to universality in basic fundamental values that can be shared across the full spectrum of social difference. A monument broadcasts values. The proclamations of a public monument are on behalf of society as a whole. In that a monument contains a universal aspiration.

Markets as Condensers
(Food) Markets simplify human relationships into transactions that are mutually beneficial, pushing frictions that may result from differences in the cultural dispositions of the protagonists, to the background. Architecture can endow this transaction with a sense of dignity; it is able to increase the ritualistic dimension of the transaction; from something quotidian or even vulgar, to a moment of de facto Culture. When that happens, a shared space of culture is born.

The Universal Building: White Square on White
The industrial warehouse – or Big Box – while architecturally unconscious, offers benefits of flexibility and anonymity. Also, it is very cheap to build (= architecture for after the gilded age). The apparent lack of specific identity in such a Big Box makes it a potentially useful type to explore issues of pluralism. However, Kazimir Malevich’s “White Square on White” offered the ultimate inspiration for the markets. The figure is open-ended and undetermined; but so is the background, which is therefore almost the same. Figure/ Background ~ Plaza/ City, or Building/ City.

We have attempted a sheer endless series of iterations of portico elements. The resulting series, we call “Platonic Panels”. Instead of a post-beam presence (engineering), these are abstract planes with a cut-out. In order to achieve this level of abstraction, we had to eliminate all utilitarian or functional details. This labor was about the design of the Joints: connections between parts. Finally, we over-dimensioned the elements to further assert the abstract plane as a strong background that allows the foreground (the scenog­raphy of market life) to take center stage.
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Name of project: Brussels Market Building

Architect: ORG Permanent Modernity

Team members: Alexander D’Hooghe, Natalie Seys, Luk Peeters, Steve Swiggers, Sanne
Peeters, Wim Francois, Griet Kuppens, Kobi Ruthenberg, Pierre Dugardyn, Larisa Ovalles, Raf De Preter, Joseph O’Connor, Theodosios Issaias, Yen Van Der Voort, Felix Lauffer, Andrew Corrigan, Michiel De Potter, Nida Rehman, Maria Simon

Urban Design and Planning: ORG Permanent Modernity
Team members:

Alexander D’Hooghe, Natalie Seys, Luk Peeters, Wim Francois, Katrien Theunis

Location: Brussels, Belgium

Size: 21,000 m2 (226,000 ft2)

Year: 2011 – 2015

Consultants: Structural, Mechanical, Electrical, Plumbing, Lighting – VK Engineering
Environmental – TPF Engineering & 3E

Construction Company: Jacques Delens NV

Client: Abattoir NV