THE NORDIC ORDER
Installation in development for Works + Words Biennale 2026, March 5th – April 10th, Aarhus School of Architecture
Installation in development for Works + Words Biennale 2026, March 5th – April 10th, Aarhus School of Architecture
The Ecologies of Stone research group was accepted to develop a new installation entitled, The Nordic Order, for the upcoming Words + Works Biennale 2026, held at Aarhus School of Architecture in collaboration with the Royal Danish Academy.
Installation Proposal
“Diversity of invention sometimes leads the architect to conceive things which he would perhaps never have imagined.” – Sebastiano Serlio, On Architecture (1537)
When Sebastiano Serlio codified the five column orders in 1537 (Doric, Ionic, Tuscan, Corinthean, Composite), he could have never imagined our current age, where the architect’s inventive powers are being tested in unprecedented ways. Like the column orders of classical lore, each originating in their own period and place, we propose a new column order for the ecological age: The Nordic Order. In a nod to the Nordic countries’ leading role in environmental reform, the Nordic Order is a formal, material, ornamental, and constructive program for the crisis of ecology.
We demonstrate the new order through a 1:1 scale mock-up consisting of four columns built in the Nordic Order. Certain principles are inherited from the classical, five-order taxonomy: columns as both representation and structure, the orders as a flexible system of proportional relations and constructive logics, and their agency in space-making. From this, new principles are introduced for the ecological age: natural materials, local materials, the use of waste or left-overs, re-use, reversibility and design-for-disassembly, low-energy processing, durability. Like the classical orders, we imagine that many possible column expressions are possible within the system of principles.
This version of the Nordic Order utilizes left-over stone blocks of larvikite from Larvik (NO), assembled with minimum processing in a post-tensioned, structural system. The structural integrity of the column relies on a joining system that takes advantage of the tooling from the quarrying process of hydraulic fracturing. This results in an aesthetic expression that is decidedly rough, brutal, and variegated. The columns are arranged to form a small room (approximate volume: 200 x 200 x 250 cm), with the column capitals inter-connected by spanning members.
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