Дата-центры долгое время принято было относить к инфраструктуре, а не архитектуре. Организаторы конкурса, напротив, полагают, что центры обработки данных стоит превращать в достопримечательности современных городов, размещая их в прежде заброшенных сооружениях. Задача конкурсантов – придумать, как преобразовать в дата-центр бывший военный бункер в Венецианских Предальпах, гармонично встроив его в ландшафт.
Источник: youngarchitectscompetitions.com
пресс-релиз:
Metaverse, avatar, cryptocurrencies. The digital world is just as real as the material world. Whatever the activity we carry out online, its ultimate and univocal implication in the empirical world will be data.
Despite their apparent volatility, digital data have deeply material roots. Physical spaces are needed to file them, technologies are needed to secure them and huge quantities of energy are needed to access them at any time.
Datacentres are the material trace of the digital world. The more this world grows, the more they multiply, thus acquiring an essential value and playing a key role for the society of the future.
Datacentres are the material trace of the digital world. The more this world grows, the more they multiply, thus acquiring an essential value and playing a key role for the society of the future.
For a long time, they have been considered infrastructures rather than architectures. Yet, numerous recent experimentations show that datacentres can become landmarks of modern cities. They can be an opportunity to repurpose abandoned architectures and places that are no longer in use in an innovative way.
This is the case of a former military bunker along the Venetian Prealps. It is an architecture that is considered difficult to reuse due to the presence of isolation segments and underground spaces – characteristics that, in fact, turn out to be advantages when building a datacentre.
How to make the most of the characteristics of a military architecture in designing a modern datacentre? How to integrate this function into the jaw dropping landscape?
These are the underlying questions of Data Landscape. This Manni Group’s competition is to imagine a new generation of datacentres which fit in the landscape to generate magnificent and iconic architectures.
Datacentres are the sign of contemporaneity. They are intended to change the face of cities just the way railway stations, factories, and large buildings have always done in order to meet the needs of the time. Taking an interest in datacentres today means writing a significant chapter of the cities of tomorrow.
Taking an interest in datacentres today means writing a significant chapter of the cities of tomorrow...