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credits
LAb[au], conception and realisation
Maarten Van Weverberg, AWG architecten
Adrien Meeùs, Pomiris Project Manager
Benoît Hoyas, Senior Project Developer
Proximus
history
2018 --- LAb[au] selected within three design teams
2020 --- after two years of material testing, the first project draft has been rejected by Proximus because of the artworks missing - rf transparency
2022: Approval by Pomiris, AWG architecten and Proximus of the new design
2024 --- september, final approval of the city administration
2025 --- the project is currently in the process of a building permit
abstract
An urban landmark is formed by an antenna mounted on a former telecom tower. The project transcodes the captured cosmic noise into words scrolling over multiple displays in the surroundings, inviting the citizens to direct their views towards the stars and let their imagination free run.
additional text
The Rtt building in Kortrijk, with its telecommunication tower, is a well-known monument that continues to spread its faith in modern times towards the city. In the book ‘Architectur en telefonie’ it has been described as an important architectural and urban symbol of the 20th century. And just like the belfry is a sign of the raising renaissance, enlightenment, the building, besides its original function, marks until today the territory as being a symbol of modern identity, knowledge, and exchange.
The artistic project ‘listen to the universe’ proposes a contemporary interpretation of the landmark that is appropriate for the information age. A parabolic antenna, known from satellite communication, crowns the tower of the RTT building. It is oriented towards the sky and captures what, since the 1960s, has become commonly known as cosmic background noise—a sound everybody has experienced when tuning into a radio station. However, this noise is the product of the universe's activity and originates from the big bang, which is in contrast to what has been thought of as a remnant of human activity on Earth.
Since the noise might withhold useful information, numerous scientific studies have been conducted to analyse it. The project takes advantage of the technologies created to convert in real time the noise patterns into letters. The resulting string of letters already contains, due to pure combinatory logic, words, which then will start to scroll along the displays mounted on the surrounding buildings of the antenna.
The antenna, by its orientation, invites the citizen to direct their views and thoughts towards the sky, and the scrolling words invite them to let their imagination free run, as it may give a ‘deeper meaning’ to our relation to space and time.
public artworks in progress by the Belgium art studio LAb[au], art & architecture - art & language - conceptual art - kinetic art - digital art - konkrete Kunst - art concret
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