Project description

The Sanatorium La Manche is situated in the polder landscape south of the Bay of Mont-Saint-Michel and west of the Couesnon Canal. Aligned to the Abbey mount the Sanatorium is a mirror island offering retreat and therapeutic treatments for a range of pulmonary conditions.

As an architectural island in an agricultural landscape, the Sanatorium seeks to engage with the greater ecology of the Bay and its fragile ecosystem by connections with water, the water of the adjacent designed wetland and the canal beyond. In this way, the architecture operates as an eddy between the Couesnon Canal and the sea, channelling water through its walls, beneath its bridges and below its stair towers, flooding its internal lake, discharging back into the Canal and the Bay beyond. The Sanatorium is a form of de-polderisation in miniature whereby land reclaimed for farming is offered back to the sea through designed rupture.

The architecture treats the human body and the ecosystem. By introducing water from the wetland into the Sanatorium it establishes an intimate relationship between body and water through therapeutic treatments: steam rooms, resistance hydrotherapies, aerobic exercises and aromatherapies and a designed landscape of internal views across, adjacent to and above water. An enclosing wall houses residential and therapeutic programmes, a rainwater treatment system and a singular elevated view to Mont-Saint-Michel. Bridges and reading towers animate the internal landscape, connecting and activating programme whilst creating viewpoints both internal and external. A laboratory and flower garden, library and acoustic performance space complete the programme.

The Reading Tower, is my personal part of the larger framework of this three-person group. It is primarily a response to Le Mont-Saint-Michel and its surrounding landscape and to the spiritual needs of people in recovery.

Ariel View expand
the Reading Tower

The walls of Le Mont-Saint-Michel, which enclose the natural mountain and the palace, are themselves a kind of fortification lacking in thickness; in the Mirror Island, the walls with their rich functionality enclose a man-made pool contributing to the de-silting of the site, which is cast in an open gesture towards the site.

The same is true of the tower. Whereas in Le Mont-Saint-Michel's North Tower the original purpose was to observe the enemy in order to better evade and counterattack, in the Reading Tower the attitude towards the observed view shifts towards an active approach and embracing of nature, one wishes to connect with nature from a different angle and height in a relatively closed island, which is This is also a spiritual connection to the world for those recovering from a lung disease that has prevented them from returning to society for a long time. Another dimension of spiritual connection is the book, as the tower provides a variety of open spaces where the recovered person can draw on spiritual knowledge and gain further spiritual fulfilment while breathing fresh air.

the Reading Tower
View from the Lake
the Reading Tower
Reading... Views
Reading... Views
Reading... Books
Reading... Books
Reading Unit
Reading Unit
Retreat Stairs
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Architecture - MArch

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