Reclaiming the Abandoned

Name
Davíð Georg Gunnarsson
Education degree
Kandidat
Fagfelt
Architecture
Institute
Architecture and Design
Program
Spatial Design
Year
2022

Lately, there has been a slow realization among Icelanders that trees can grow in the country's once treeless land. The project is a transformation of a deserted woodland farm into a forestry workshop, expanding the usage of a proliferating resource.

Moreover, it embodies the reuse of old structures with the ambition to establish a healthier relationship between the built environment and nature.

Forestry in Iceland has been proliferating since afforestation started in the country between 1950-1980, reaching a high of about 6 million seedlings per year from 2007-to 2009. Today the forests need thinning, and timber sales of Icelandic wood have become a reality not many could have imagined a few decades ago. However, a large percentage of the resources are ‘chips’ and ‘fuelwood.’ Therefore, a potential is to exemplify how these can be used in a more sustainable matter such as wood production.

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Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
Daylight studies of physical models
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Site aerial
Section A-A 1:250
North façade
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The unexpected
Plan 1:50
Silhouette enhancement
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Circular approach
Image of the original farm at Stálpastaðir from 1963
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The Royal Danish Academy supports the Sustainable Development Goals

Since 2017 the Royal Danish Academy has worked with the Sustainable Development Goals. This is reflected in our research, our teaching and in our students’ projects. This project relates to the following UN goal(-s)
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