Orient Ofis
The Seddülbahir Fortress is located at the southern entrance to the Dardanelles on the European shore of the Gallipoli Peninsula. Initially built in the mid-17th century by Hatice Turhan Sultan, the mother of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet IV, Seddülbahir, or “the Wall of the Sea,” protected the strategic waterway that connected the Aegean Sea to Istanbul, the Ottoman Empire’s capital. Despite severe coastal erosion and numerous earthquakes, the fortress, and its adjacent village survived into the early 20th century relatively intact. Both were severely bombarded by the Allied Forces in WWI, during the Gallipoli campaign. While many of the masonry towers and walls, and most of its interior structures were severely damaged, the fortress continued to be used as a Turkish military outpost until 1997 when the documentation, restoration, and re-use process of Seddülbahir began.
A multi-disciplinary team of architects, engineers, architectural historians, archivists, oral historians, restoration specialists, museologists, and landscape designers conducted extensive archival, archeological, conservation, restoration, and geodesic research, in collaboration with universities and different government ministries, working for 25 years to open Seddülbahir Fortress to the public on March 18, 2023.
Today the Gallipoli peninsula is a national park and a peaceful landscape of manicured cemeteries and pristine commemorative monuments to honor the WWI dead from many countries. There is little left on the peninsula that recalls the violent destruction of the battles fought there. A guiding concept in the restoration process at the Seddülbahir Fortress was to preserve the memory of the destruction of WWI and create a space to reflect on peace. Several elements of the fortress, such as the West and South Towers, are preserved as ruins and serve as “lieux de mémoire” of the toll that war has on buildings and their landscapes.
The Main Gate of Seddülbahir Fortress, and other demolished sections of the fortress, such as the Domed Building, with their silhouettes of light timber suggest– but do not declare– what these sections of the fortress may have looked like originally. The slatted wood frame of the Main Gate allows sunlight and air, essential elements of life, to permeate the entrance to the fortress. This gate and the Domed Building emphasize the importance of reversibility in any restorative intervention. Contemporary wood elements in the fortress are used sparingly, echoing the construction techniques used by the Ottomans.
A new museum building replaced abandoned concrete barracks from the 1960s and exhibits archaeological finds from the site, including an Ottoman era road which divides the museum building itself. Here the new masonry blocks resonate with the original masonry of the Ottoman walls lowering the visual impact of this new structure.
Today the Seddülbahir Fortress is a vibrant place. The architecture invites all to reflect upon the history of past destruction and war, and to cherish peace. With its unique entrance complex,
museum, an artists’ workshop, and redesigned village square, all serving visitors and the local community, the fortress looks to a future in which war is now a distant, but important memory.
Ödüller
- Arkitera Turkey Architecture Annual Selection, 2021 with Bab-ı Kebir Revitalization
- International DOMUS Award Restoration and Preservation Short List, 2023
- Arkitera Turkey Architecture Annual Selection, 2023
- National Architecture Exhibition and Awards (Building/Preservation), 2024
- Architizer A+ Awards (Cultural/Museum) Finalist, 2024
- World Architecture Festival (Completed Buildings/Culture) Shortlist 2024
Künye
Project Name: Seddülbahir Fortress Re-Use Project
Location: Eceabat, Çanakkale, Türkiye
Project Date: 1997-2023
Construction Date: 2015-2023
Type: Adaptive Re-Use, Cultural, Competition, Mixed Use, Museum & Exhibition
Program: Museum
Indoor Area (m2): 5.000
Land Area (m2): 42.000
Scope of Work: Conceptual Design, Re-Use Project Spatial Coordination, Technical Design and Site Consultancy
Survey, Restitution, Restoration Projects Author: Arzu Özsavaşçı (AOMTD)
Re-Use Project Author: Y. Burak Dolu (KOOP Architects)
Scientific Advisory Board: Gülsün Tanyeli, Lucienne Thys-Şenocak, Rahmi Nurhan Çelik, Feridun Çılı, Haluk Sesigür, Arzu Özsavaşcı
Employer: Directorate of Gallipoli Historic Site (ÇATAB/Çanakkale Savaşları Gelibolu Tarihi Alan Başkanlığı)
Surveying, Restitution, Restoration, Archaeology, Measurement, Archive Projects Team: Lucienne Thys-Şenocak, Rahmi Nurhan Çelik, Gülsün, Feridun Çılı, Haluk Sesigür, Arzu Özsavaşcı, Deniz Özkan, Umut Almaç, Selin Gener, İrem Nardereli, Nurdan Kuban, Günnur Çalışkan, Murat Alaboz, Günder Varinlioğlu, Arzu Öztürk, Carolyn Aslan, Bensen Ünlüoğlu, Gülay Karcı, Günşıl Kılıç, Kemal Sümer, Senem Uyanık, Tevfik Özlüdemir, Caner Güney, Banu Yüksel, Göksel Akkoca, Yelda Ademoğlu, Mehmet Erim, Bora Sayın, Serdar Erol, Bihter Özöner, Dursun Z. Şeker, Davut Erkan, Hasan Karataş, Yeşim Anadol, Işıl Cerem Cenker, Ahmet Ersen, Marisa Laurenzi Tabasso
Galeri
Proje Yeri
Koop Mimarlık
Şahkulu Mahallesi,
Kumbaracı Yokuşu, No:57, D:5,
Beyoğlu / İstanbul / Türkiye