Spa Pavilion / smartvoll

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography, Facade, ConcreteSpa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior PhotographySpa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows, Garden, CourtyardSpa Pavilion / smartvoll - Interior Photography, ColumnSpa Pavilion / smartvoll - More Images+ 28

Vienna, Austria
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Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography, Facade, Garden, Courtyard
© Dimitar Gamizov

Text description provided by the architects. In Austria, the catchall marketing phrase for a basement hotel spa decorated with palm trees and neon lights is a “wellness temple”. Here in the village of Hinterbrühl, however, a new private spa has created something very special indeed: a 21st-century temple of relaxation. A first glance doesn’t reveal that the structure is dedicated to the cult of the bathhouse, and yet it includes all the signature features—from jacuzzi to steam bath.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography, Facade, Windows, Garden, Courtyard
© Dimitar Gamizov

The fully consistent use of one single material gives the outside areas an inside feeling and vice versa,” says Olya Sendetska of smartvoll.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography, Facade, Concrete
© Dimitar Gamizov

The spa pavilion is located at the back of the grounds, across from the old villa. The slope from the main house is very slight—just enough to create a visual separation between the bathhouse and the turn-of-the-century villa. It is composed of a single material, like a sculpture: Rauris quartzite, a natural stone, can withstand steam, chlorine, the heat of the sauna, and the winter frost without damage. The vertical slabs don’t look like walls, nor the horizontal ones like roofs, an impression that arises from the way the walls perforate and extends from the ceiling slabs, fully avoiding any suggestion of a supporting role and making the roof elements seem to float.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography
© Dimitar Gamizov
Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography
© Anton Klyshnia

Looking Out but Not In. Set within the rectangular, three-dimensional grid, the slabs of stone seem not to be assembled, but rather placed in relation to one another. These interactions form spaces and niches for the various features, opening or obscuring views as needed. This allows the interior to naturally communicate with the surrounding greenery—and a holistic spatial experience is created. While the pavilion is open on all four sides, the very careful alignment of the panels creates absolute privacy. In the summer, one can’t imagine a more open building. In the winter, glass panels hidden in the wall and ceiling slide out and over the pavilion. The bathhouse is private—one can wander between the jacuzzi, steam bath, sauna, shower, pool, sundeck, and bar in any season and in any state of dress.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography
© Dimitar Gamizov

Stone Unifies. A staircase behind the bar descends to a former underground passageway connecting the villa and the bathhouse, which was previously used as a bowling alley. Glass elements now structure the elongated tube, marking the various exercise areas. The Rauris quartzite creates a rhythmic harmony together with the vertical moss plantings, architecturally uniting the underground gym with the aboveground bathhouse.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Interior Photography
© Dimitar Gamizov
Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Image 33 of 33
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Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Interior Photography
© Dimitar Gamizov

The monotonous and monumental appearance of the pavilion is exactly what causes the contemplative effect—aesthetics is the creative force behind the atmosphere,” says Philipp Buxbaum of smartvoll.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography
© Dimitar Gamizov

The monolithic slabs of the pavilion structure the space in different ways, creating a variety of perspectives, directions, characteristics, spatial experiences, and outdoor interactions. At the same time, the individual zones also come together to form a large, open spa architecture. The labyrinthine nested floor plan dispenses with symmetry and repetition, instead of surprising with its structure. The result is a fitness area with a clear structure and a bathhouse that doesn’t dictate a specific direction, instead of placing the experience itself in the foreground. This is a multidimensional space, without clear boundaries between outside and inside, but also a stone monument that does not subordinate itself to pure functionalism, instead of standing for itself—for its own existence and meaning.

Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Interior Photography, Column
© Dimitar Gamizov
Spa Pavilion / smartvoll - Exterior Photography, Brick, Concrete
© Dimitar Gamizov

The bathhouse can be interpreted in two ways: On the one hand, it follows the modernist tradition of using a reduced formal vocabulary to make the functions vividly clear and spatially tangible. However, it is also a shining example of what entices us to speak of “cult” and “temple” in conjunction with spas. A modern functional building for a cult purpose, returning to the bathhouse a piece of the sacredness attributed to it in antiquity.

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Address:Vienna, Austria

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Cite: "Spa Pavilion / smartvoll" 17 Mar 2021. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/958666/spa-pavilion-smartvoll> ISSN 0719-8884

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