THE LANGEN FOUNDATION.
May 13th, 2010
Today I was browsing through a few old photos from a trip we took to Neuss during my study abroad in Germany. It is a relatively small city to the southwest of Düsseldorf and is home to the Hombroich Cultural Environment.
The Hombroich Cultural Environment is a synthesis of art, architecture and nature. The starting point of this, now continuously developing experiment of cultural, philosophical and artistic exchange, originated in the foundation of the Museum Insel Hombroich twenty years ago. Now the unique concept can be understood as a variable interaction between a growing and changing creative crowd – studios are rented out to artists, locations can be booked for events – and the interested visitor can become engaged by visiting one of the museums or participating in the community life.
Basically it is the huge acreage of land dedicated to the arts. Famous architects, artists and designers have landed commissions to be free in expression and ideas in this “neighborhood” of landmarks. From rural studios and gardens to Tadao Ando’s sleek Langen Foundation Museum, there is quite a bit to take in.

The experience you have walking through this foundation is one of complete serenity. It is a clean integration between outside and in; North-Rhine Westphalia landscape and art. Ando gives so much attention to detal: the picture-window views, human-sized concrete module system, mirroring on the reflecting pool, elegant wayfinding text.
Harmoniously embedded in the landscape, the Langen Foundation presents itself as a complex of fair-faced concrete, glass and steel surrounded by earthworks. Through a broad concrete arch, the way leads along cherry trees and past an artificial pond to two joined complexes of buildings which differ from each other architecturally: a long concrete structure surrounded by a mantle of glass and, at an angle of 45 degrees, two concrete bars built parallel to one another. These latter two buildings are buried six metres deep in the earth and protrude only 3.45 metres above it. The 8 metres room height can only be experienced from within the building. Between the two tracts leads the “Grand Stair” like a ladder to heaven from the depths back into nature. Slabs of concrete in the format of Japanese tatami mats, the famous “concrete like silk”, long stairs, ramps and light slits characterize also this new building from Tadao Ando. The entire complex is a masterpiece of lines, a fascinating interplay between the interior and the exterior, art and nature, massiveness and lightness. Reflections in the glass skin and the water of the pond dissolve borders and communicate an impression of weightlessness.
–The Langen Foundation
See here for a video inside the Langen.
























































