The Landroom is a minimal environmental structure designed on the verge between territory and landscape object. It is located at the western observation point on the edge of the Mitzpe Ramon crater in the Negev. At night it serves as an astronomical observatory and provides shelter for visitors where the sun’s rays are burning in daylight.
The Landroom is about 6 square meters in size and it can accommodate two people. It embodies the transition from a normative lifestyle to the unpredictable living conditions created as a result of the coronavirus pandemic that plagues our world today.
It also maintains an internal and external dialogue with the physical area (Ramon Crater) in which it is located, thus allowing a connection between the space and the landscape that surrounds it. Among other things, the atmosphere in the Landroom transform itself with changing environmental conditions throughout the day.
The project was built entirely of earth and sand from Ramon Crater, as well as stones found at the site. The construction process takes place by compressing soil into its various layers into a mold created specifically for the design of the project, in order to create the a visual stratification of the material from which the Landroom is built. The project examines the relationship between material and territorial space, and how they define each other.
Among other things, the Landroom refers to the soundscape local environment. Inside the space, there is a window on which hangs a wind bell built of desert stone and thus a dialogue takes place with the natural environment in which it is located.
This work emphasizes the need of man to observe nature. The Landroom is a spatial formal translation that provides the visitor a sense of freedom and space within a unique landscape.

Project details

Design: Gitai Architects
Project Location: Mitzpe Ramon, Negev, Israel
Typology: Landscape object
Built: 2020
Design team: Ben Gitai, Sara Arneberg Gitai
Collaborators: Isabelle Wolf, Yves Tirman
Rammed earth: With the earth by Shahar Ouannou
Wind desert bell: Company Tuschan
Photo credits: © Dan Bronfeld

Gitai Architects

Gitai Architects

The team composed of architects and landscape architects is geared towards a great opportunity and challenge to contribute to the creation of an adaptable ways of living and working nowadays. This interdisciplinary approach may involve opening a new type of structures to its immediate environment, a composite activities and multifunctional spaces, which can be adapted to a large variety of scales. The practice is pursuing to integrate space in a context of dissemination of resources and their migrations, of no visible frontiers, while maintaining a dynamic understanding of the human need to have a confortable constructive environment.