The Walk-in Camera Obscura at Fürstenfeld Regional Hospital / balloon architekten ZT-OG
A permanent spatial installation for the ?Room of Silence? at the palliative unitThe only architectural firm to do so, balloon have been experimenting since 2012 with camera obscura modules in contemporary architectural culture.
© Schreyer David
Architects: balloon architekten ZT-OG
Location: Krankenhausgasse 1, 8280 Fürstenfeld, Austria
Lead Architects: Iris Rampula, Konrad Promitzer
Other Participants: gaft-Lichtdesign, Eugen Schöberl
Interior Designer: ARGE Morawetz ? Zinganel, Wolfgang Wimmer
Clients: Steiermärkische Krankenanstaltengesellschaft KAGES, KIG Krankenanstalten Immobilien GmbH
Area: 41.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Schreyer David
© Schreyer David
A permanent spatial installation for the ?Room of Silence? at the palliative unit
The only architectural firm to do so, balloon have been experimenting since 2012 with camera obscura modules in contemporary architectural culture.
© Schreyer David
Camera obscura
In terms of how it works, the camera obscura as the prototype of the photographic camera is much like the human eye, that depicts images upside down on the retina. Distinctive features in the surroundings are photographed and projected in real time through a hole in the wall, upside down and along with all changes due to incidence of light, time of day and year, onto a screen in the darkened room inside the camera obscur...
© Schreyer David
Architects: balloon architekten ZT-OG
Location: Krankenhausgasse 1, 8280 Fürstenfeld, Austria
Lead Architects: Iris Rampula, Konrad Promitzer
Other Participants: gaft-Lichtdesign, Eugen Schöberl
Interior Designer: ARGE Morawetz ? Zinganel, Wolfgang Wimmer
Clients: Steiermärkische Krankenanstaltengesellschaft KAGES, KIG Krankenanstalten Immobilien GmbH
Area: 41.0 m2
Project Year: 2017
Photographs: Schreyer David
© Schreyer David
A permanent spatial installation for the ?Room of Silence? at the palliative unit
The only architectural firm to do so, balloon have been experimenting since 2012 with camera obscura modules in contemporary architectural culture.
© Schreyer David
Camera obscura
In terms of how it works, the camera obscura as the prototype of the photographic camera is much like the human eye, that depicts images upside down on the retina. Distinctive features in the surroundings are photographed and projected in real time through a hole in the wall, upside down and along with all changes due to incidence of light, time of day and year, onto a screen in the darkened room inside the camera obscur...
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