This massive structure is a space that intensifies the experience of interiority, placing the public in a sheltered proximity away from the murmurs of the world.

Siegfried causes the engulfing of Mélusine, his beloved, after having ogled her through the keyhole. The young woman considered the space of the room as the guarantor of secrecy. In the urban park, we place a massive object that conceals the interior nature of the installation. It is a confined space punctuated with discreet skylights, allowing partial views of the outside without being seen (and vice versa).

The architecture inherits from the city’s fortifications that once stood here. Its elongated layout makes it both a space for movement and pause. Under the sky, the only external element to enter, a facing pair of long rows of benches invite encounters.