Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten

Architects: RO&AD Architecten
Location: Bergen op Zoom, The
Year: 2014
Photographs: Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten

From the architect. Dutch military engineer Menno van Coehoorn built the Ravelijn op den Zoom fortress in Bergen op Zoom, Netherlands, in the 18th century. Designed with a moat as its system of defense, Ravelijn op den Zoom was only accessible by boat. Today, the fortress is used for small events—and with the moat still in place could only be reached by a single bridge. RO&AD Architecten sought to provide additional access to the small island to better accommodate guests as well as provide another exit for emergencies.

To increase access without distracting from the historic appearance and layout, the architecture team designed a floating bridge that sits on the water. The bridge is 80 meters long and echoes the same path boats took to reach Ravelijn op den Zoom. The bridge follows a curved pattern that doubles as a design aesthetic as well as covering the floaters—polyethylene pipes filled with air—on which the bridge sits.

Designed with Accoya wood, the bridge surface features a natural and beautiful appearance that complements the historic nature of the fortress. Accoya wood undergoes a revolutionary proprietary modification process called acetylation that renders it an unrecognizable food source, preventing fungal decay achieving increasing Class 1 durability while increasing its dimensional stability; swelling and shrinkage are reduced by 70% or more. The material is sourced from FSC-certified forests, Cradle to Cradle Gold certified and independent tests have shown its carbon negative.

Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Courtesy of RO&AD Architecten
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Sketch
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Floor Plan
Dutch Floating Bridge / RO&AD Architecten Floor Plan

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How to Draw and Paint Fantasy Architecture: From Ancient Citadels and Gothic Castles to Subterranean Palaces and Floating Fortresses

Advice and instruction from a leading fantasy illustrator guides art students who intend to pursue careers illustrating computer games, children’s books, graphic novels, and other related media. This book’s opening chapter analyzes traditional architectural shapes that include arches, columns, towers, vaults, and buttresses. Chapters that follow apply principles of lighting, shadow, and perspective to the architectural forms, and discuss ways of creating surface textures and adding dramatic atmosphere to illustrations. Readers are then guided through a series of projects of increasing complexity in which they create illustrations dominated by fantasy castles, palaces, dungeons, and more. Here is comprehensive instruction in the techniques required for capturing fantastic buildings, alien architecture, and alternate realities. More than 250 enlightening color illustrations.

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