In the white house we find the main exhibition and conference room. The cladding of the white house is made of the smooth and seamless composite material Himacs/Corian, so that the contrast between old and new is maximised. The basement extension peaks through the ground floor with a shiny white little house. The insulated basement spaces take care of perfect climatic conditions, while the old armory provides the authentic feeling of the military past. To provide the necessary spaces bureau SLA did a trick: they lifted the shack by a few meters, poured a concrete basement and placed the wooden building back in its original position - now on a new foundation. This was against the given brief: the intention was to insulate the wooden shack from the inside and to make sure that the place could be used through summer and winter in comfortable climatic conditions. The designers of bureau SLA made sure that this rather rustique atmosphere of the armory was fully kept. Wooden beams, wooden floors, wooden walls and wooden window frames with wooden shutters. Originally, the armory consisted of little more than a bare wooden shack next to the fortress tower. The fortress island used to be completely closed during the winter season, but from now on visitors can visit the renovated monumental armory all year round. Each winter the fortress tower closes its doors to make sure that the hundreds little mammals have an undisturbed hi-bernation. The fortification is not only popular with people: bats also love it. Fort Asperen has been open to the public since 1986, hosting controversial art- and design exhibitions. The Waterline is so unique, that it was nominated for Unesco World Heritage in 2011. This longstretched military com-plex of a series of inundations was made in the 19th century to protect the Netherlands against invasions from the east. Fort Asperen is one of the most treasured fortresses of the so-called New Dutch Waterline.
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