Gahanga Cricket Stadium

Cricket and wedding

This multi-award-winning project is more than just a cricket stadium — you can also get married here.

The Gahanga Cricket Stadium is primarily the work of the Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foundation, which raised the sum of 1.1 million euros required for its construction.

The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee

Cricket was barely played in Rwanda before the 1994 geno­cide. Now there are 7,000 players nati­on­wide, and the sport is playing a lead role in the healing process.

The inau­gu­ra­tion of Rwanda Cricket Stadium marks the end of a remar­kable six-year under­ta­king by the Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foun­da­tion who have raised the £1 million required to build the spec­ta­cular new home of Rwandan cricket

The Rwanda Cricket Stadium is desi­gned for long-term sustaina­bi­lity. The entire site is being cons­tructed to ensure signi­fi­cant carbon savings and sustainable water usage, it will incor­po­rate envi­ron­men­tally sensi­tive design, provide jobs for the local commu­nity, and ensure a revenue stream that will allow for the upkeep of the faci­lity and further invest­ment in the game.

The cons­truc­tion process used predo­mi­nantly local labour, inves­ting in the local commu­nity.

The cons­truc­tion process was mainly carried out using local labour.

The stadium is prima­rily thanks to the Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foun­da­tion, which raised the sum of 1.1 million euros required for the cons­truc­tion.

Architects

Light Earth Designs
Pioneer House, Chivers Way
Histon, Cambridge
Cambridge­shire
UK-CB24 9NL

Bauherr

Rwanda Cricket Stadium Foun­da­tion

The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee
The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee
The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee
The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee

This breathtaking venue now also serves as a stage for weddings, birthday parties, social events, company outings, shows and concerts.

The archi­tec­ture and engi­nee­ring awards winning venue ist more than just a cricket stadium. 

This breath­ta­king place serve as an event venue for diffe­rent events inclu­ding wedding, birthday parties, social games, corpo­rate away day, show or concert and other events. It also has Bar, Restau­rant and Coffee shop.

The new pavi­lion, which also serves as a restau­rant is a fanta­stic feat of engi­nee­ring, built using 66,000 hand­made tiles in layers without using concrete. The arched pavi­lion design repres­ents the fall of a boun­cing ball and spec­tator seating will be carved out of the earth to mimic the terraced farms on the steep Kigali Hills that provide a spec­ta­cular back­drop.

The buil­ding grows out of the cut soil banking that was formed as the pitch was levelled — thus beco­ming part of the land­scape. The banking creates a wonderful natural amphi­theatre with great views to the pitch and wetland valley beyond.

Whilst the language of the buil­ding speaks about progres­sion and dyna­mism through extreme struc­tural effi­ci­ency, the mate­rials speak of the natural, the hand made and the human. It a buil­ding made by Rwandans using Rwandan mate­rials.

The tiles are produced on site from local soil by low skilled and skilled locals – hydrau­li­cally pressed with a small addi­tion of cement and do not require firing. They are laid in layers onto a tempo­rary timber skeleton — again using a combi­na­tion of low and higher skilled local labour and span up to 16m.

Geogrid is added to give some seismic protec­tion, deve­loped by rese­arch in archi­tec­ture and engi­nee­ring at Cambridge Univer­sity. The shells are water­pro­ofed then topped with local broken granite (found ever­y­where across the country), blen­ding into the natural palate while the granite adds weight and stabi­lity.

The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee
The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee
The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee
The Couch by MVRDVPhoto: ©Daria Scagliola & Stijn Brakkee

Simple, effi­cient and thin concrete tables are inserted into the vaults, provi­ding space for the more enclosed func­tions the service areas, the chan­ging rooms, an office and a restau­rant. These tables are topped with natural Rwandan agro-waste­fired tiles made of commonly found wetland clay.

The open mezza­nines — a bar and a club­house — enjoy wonderful raised clear pano­r­amic views over the Oval and wetland valley beyond

Bricks are used to define edges and spaces — often laid in perfo­rate bond – allo­wing the breeze and light to filter through. These bricks are sourced from enter­prises set up by Swiss NGO SKAT Consul­ting, and are also low carbon agro-waste-fired bricks using high effi­ci­ency kilns, further redu­cing energy and carbon.

Waste stone from Rwandan granite floor and work­tops are used for floo­ring.

The plywood rectan­gles used to press the tiles are reused as coun­ter­tops while timber and plywood from the vault guide­work is made into joinery and doors, ensu­ring that a maximum of waste mate­rial goes into primary produc­tion. Local slate is confi­gured to allow rain water to permeate and infil­trate the soil.

Retai­ning walls are either local granite boulders or are hollow to encou­rage plan­ting.

Address

Gahanga Cricket Stadium
Unnamed Road
Rwanda

Opening

2017

The imperfections are celebrated — they are human and beautiful — and when combined with the layering of natural textures the building becomes imbues and celebrates this wonderful place.

The buil­ding grows out of the cut soil banking that was formed as the pitch was levelled — thus beco­ming part of the land­scape. The banking creates a wonderful natural amphi­theatre with great views to the pitch and wetland valley beyond.

Whilst the language of the buil­ding speaks about progres­sion and dyna­mism through extreme struc­tural effi­ci­ency, the mate­rials speak of the natural, the hand made and the human. It a buil­ding made by Rwandans using Rwandan mate­rials.

The imper­fec­tions are cele­brated — they are human and beau­tiful — and when combined with the laye­ring of natural textures the buil­ding becomes imbues and cele­brates this wonderful place.

Images

Light Earth Designs
Michael Ramage, Jona­than Gregson

Text

Johannes Bühl­be­cker
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