| Type | work | bureau |
|---|
| Year / years | 1889 | 1979 |
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| Place | Brussels, Brussels, Belgium | Haldenstein, Graubunden, Switzerland |
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| Place context | Brussels, Brussels, Belgium | Representative site: Vals, Graubunden, Switzerland |
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| Climate | 8°C · 14.1h daylight · 8 km/h wind | 3°C · 13.9h daylight · 4 km/h wind · via Therme Vals |
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| Focus | Sacred building | 2 works in corpus |
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| Architects | | |
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| Linked context | Bureaus | Notable works - Therme Vals
- Bruder Klaus Field Chapel
|
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| Typologies | - temple
- sacred space
- pavilion
- landscape
| - bathhouse
- hospitality
- landscape
- chapel
- religious building
|
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| Materials | | - quartzite
- concrete
- water
- rammed concrete
- timber
|
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| Carbon signals | Stone look like the main embodied-carbon drivers in the current palette. | Concrete, Concrete, and Quartzite look like the main embodied-carbon drivers in the current palette. - Concrete
- Concrete
- Quartzite
|
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| Lower-carbon levers | - Check source geography, fabrication intensity, and whether stone is structural, cladding, or finish-only.
| - Look for lower-clinker mixes, reused structure, and scope reductions before fine-grained product swaps.
- Use classification and product-level EPD research to place this material more precisely.
- Track sourcing, certification, and assembly logic rather than assuming timber is automatically low impact.
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| Accessibility | Publicly accessible | 2 of 2 recorded works are publicly accessible |
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| Related books | No linked books yet. | |
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