The Former Bangalore jail in India, now Freedom Park. In recent years, no meaningful visits from independent journalists or monitoring groups have been permitted, so no recent photographs or other accounts exist of its interior space, except for the memories of Saydnaya survivors. Located about 25 kilometers north of Damascus, Saydnaya stands in a German-designed building dating from the 1970s.
PRISON ARCHITECT STARTING LAYOUT SERIES
After passing through a series of interrogations and centers, many prisoners are taken to Saydnaya, a notoriously brutal “final destination,” where torture is used not to obtain information, but rather only to terrorize and often kill detainees. Since the beginnings of the Syrian crisis in 2011, tens of thousands of Syrians have been taken into a secret network of prisons and detention centers run by the Assad government for a variety of alleged crimes opposing the regime. The project, which was commissioned in 2016, reconstructs the architecture of the secret detention center from the memory of several survivors, who are now refugees in Turkey.
Maybe you will get a pot plant in a few weeks.įorensic Architecture, a research agency based at the University of London, in collaboration with Amnesty International, has created a 3D model of Saydnaya, a Syrian torture prison, using architectural and acoustic modeling. Now multiply that by five days a week, 48 weeks a year. When you get outside and take a breath, you will instantly notice that the air outside is fresh. As you don't have an operable window, you have been breathing in recycled air all day. It might even feel a bit stuffy, regardless of the door being open or closed. The ventilation is alright, but you start to feel droopy at around 3pm because the carbon dioxide levels in your shoebox have risen. The fluorescent lighting that you sit under for eight hours has thrown out your body's natural circadian rhythm. If you are lucky, and you do have a window, it's fixed, and you are looking into an office in the neighbouring building that is five metres away. You have no real window or view to the outside, so you can't tell if it's raining outside or sunny. Your office has a glazed front, but you are looking into another open office. Imagine that you are in a cubicle located in the middle of the office floor plate. Guymer Bailey Melbourne Studio © Guymer Bailey Architects