PROJECT DESCRIPTION:
The Venilale Community Meeting Hall was designed in collaboration with the people of Venilale, East Timor. It is located on the main street of Venilale and provides a venue for women, youth, farmers, craftspeople and other citizens to hold meetings, stage ceremonies, attend workshops and share ideas. It serves as a place of convergence and coordination and contributes to increased cooperation between Venilale’s citizens.
The Meeting Hall’s design embodies East Timor’s birth as a nation and the hopes of fledgling, fragile democracy. A series of bamboo frames form a box at the building’s core. They create a concurrent sense of enclosure and permeability and define a place of gathering that is accessible to all of Venilale’s citizens. A broad single pitch roof floats above offering protection from the elements and a sense of security. Open ends connect the Meeting Hall to Venilale’s main street. They frame a view of the mountains beyond, accentuating the beauty of the landscape and inspiring Venilale’s citizens to look towards their future.
The Venilale Community Meeting Hall is constructed from the locally grown bamboo, dendrocalamous asper (10-12cm dia.), preserved with the environmentally safe preservative borax. Adjustable exterior bamboo screens will allow Meeting Hall occupants to adjust daylight and wind levels according to the season, the weather and their preferences. Adjustable interior bamboo screens will allow occupants to the divide the center into multiple rooms and hold several meetings at once.
The Hall’s roof is optimized for solar panels and supplies power to scores of Venilale homes. It also serves as a rainwater catchment surface, channeling rainwater into storage tanks for later use in cooking, cleaning and irrigation.






I like it, Beautiful view from the inside out to the mountains, like a pictureframe. I am not familiar with the timorese architectural traditions so hard to say how the forms responds to that, but with new functions (like solar panels and stuff) the forms might need to be altered to suit that purpose. Important issue is that the construction is easy. I know in some parts of Africa where people are used to building round shapes, building straight lines and thinking perpendicular is not the local culture and therefore not easily built.
Erik