In what is becoming a more and more agnostic world, managed by the certainty of rational science and logical AI, and their intriguing distractions, the longing for something more exposes itself in various ways from time to time. One outcome that could be considered an extreme, is the gathering of large congregations of enthusiastic worshippers of various persuasions and titles, to express, share, and celebrate something more about life and a particular belief; the other consequence is more subtle and intimate, involving the personal desire to embody something of the inexplicable contemplative life in a small space, perhaps one could call it a chapel, to give something back to this mysterious world of silent wonder; to create a place for it; a home; to recognise it with a gesture explained as something like a heart-felt thank you; gratitude.
This building of a place of worship/retreat to shelter the soul from the hustle/bustle of the world that is getting ever busier ‘getting and spending,’ texting and consuming content, reminds one of the Crusaders, the knights who made a commitment prior to leaving for the Middle East, or in other challenging circumstances, declaring that if one should return home, then a church/chapel will be erected as a form of thanks, as if to bribe God or good fortune. So it is that we see many small churches dedicated to this idea/ideal, like that in Dinan, France:
The Basilica of Saint-Sauveur de Dinan is a Roman Catholic church situated in Dinan, France.
Legend has it that Riwallon le Roux, the lord of Dinan, founded the priory of Saint-Sauveur de Dinan in 1112 upon his return from the Holy Land. As the story goes, the knight was taken prisoner during the First Crusade and vowed to build a church in honor of Saint-Sauveur and the Holy Trinity if he ever returned home.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basilica_of_Saint-Sauveur_%28Dinan%29
And today, in our increasingly stressful times, we are seeing yet again, the building of places of worship/contemplation just as a gesture of thanks for life itself and all that this entails, to confirm this quiet richness by providing a secluded place for the repose of the spirit. The small chapels designed by Peter Zumthor have been well publicised, like his thermal baths, The Therme Vals at Graubünden, Switzerland, and have become miniature icons with a depth of vision and a detailed execution that is managed with a care and rigour that gives strength and commitment to the building, its concept, and its intentions; there is an integrity here that quietly hums a confirmation in tune with the resolve. It is in the referencing of forms and meaning, and this search for commitment, that one senses a struggle in some examples of these personal places that disrupts the cohesion of the intentions for place and experience, changing these with an unspoken distracting intrusion.
Zumthor’s work touches subtle matters with an integral wholeness that enriches experience. It highlights the traditional proposition that is rejected today, that emotive objectives, desires, and feelings that generate concepts and their construction, do permeate form and material into experience. Other projects make an effort to do likewise, but sadly seem to get lost in the words, distorted by another logic and interpretation, different ambitions, leaving the situation somewhat tensely divided, like the circumstance one senses with an artist trying to explain the idea of the artwork in esoteric terms that mock the obvious exoteric ordinariness of the piece, and vice versa, perhaps arguing shrewdly but obtusely, that less is always more: see – https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2025/09/swell-25-necessity-essence.html.
The task to achieve the desired qualities in such precious projects is difficult in these Godless times, with one easily adopting things like simple numerical counts to touch on possible ‘Trinity’ connections, for example, or some other such structured, explicit referencing. Then there is the grasping at other forms and images from a few, favoured, successful outcomes that have managed to embody meaning, like the well known and much loved Chapel at Ronchamp by Le Corbusier. Likewise, the clichés that linger from older times are used, claimed for their connotation, like stained glass that becomes an indulgence in colour, intended as a reference that is meant to allude to historic spiritual purposes.
Unfortunately, unlike older times, our populations are literate, (see Ananda Coomaraswamy’s The Bugbear of Literacy), so the messages embodied in the cathedrals no longer hold their essential, enlightening essence, their vital, lived relevance; and we have no history of using graphic lettering on our buildings for more direct readings, in the ways that we see sacred words and texts used prolifically, and beautifully, in Islamic art and architecture. The only reference we have here to words on buildings is from the Renaissance and its revivalist buildings where names of scholars, et.al., were carved into friezes and the like to suggest recognition of genius, and to give stature to place.
So it is that references in these new, meaningful places for contemplation try to become more ‘symbolic’ in their intent, at a time when we know little about symbolism, and hold fewer and fewer common ideals that could identify meaning as a ‘common sense’ or a shared experience. In this situation, we see more of the referencing taking on what we know as the workings of a sign, rather than a symbol. The sign is more a self-consciously chosen directional pointer defining intended outcomes for the eye and thought, how and what to see, lacking the ‘inner necessity’ that Wassily Kandinsky spoke about in Concerning the Spiritual in Art, and which Abū Bakr Sirāj ad-Dīn (Martin Lings) alluded to in his explanation of the symbol as a shadow, noting that symbols: have the power to remind . . . of their counterparts in higher worlds not through merely incidental resemblance but because they are actually related to them in the way that a shadow is related to the object which it casts. There is not the least thing in existence which is not such a shadow . . . Nor is there anything which is any more than a shadow. For more on the idea of a symbol see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2024/06/country-outside-inside-place.html.
In some projects we see subtle matters transformed into blunt statements of fact, and personal interpretations and ideas being framed as expected universal outcomes, when they are merely hopeful fantasies, intentions desired and described in a way that remains otherwise – literally ‘wise’ in a different manner.
The various published texts on these chapels offer links to other similar buildings, creating almost an endless chain of cross-referencing of projects. This selection begins the list and establishes a set of examples to further develop the ideas so far outlined.
The Bruder Klaus Field Chapel Peter Zumthor
https://www.archdaily.com/106352/bruder-klaus-field-chapel-peter-zumthor
Saint Benedict Chapel Peter Zumthor
https://www.anticcolonial.com/en/naturelovers/saint-benedict-chapel-by-peter-zumthor/
Doshi Retreat Balkrishna Doshi
https://www.dezeen.com/2025/10/24/balkrishna-doshi-retreat-vitra-campus/
The Chapel of St Thérèse Lisieux Bill O’Sullivan Architecture https://www.dezeen.com/2025/10/19/bull-osullivan-chapel-st-therese-lisieux/
Open Chapel in Germany Hometown Christopher Hesse Architects https://www.dezeen.com/2025/03/02/open-chapel-christoph-hesse-architects/
Our Lady of Sorrows Chapel RCNKSK
https://www.dezeen.com/2024/11/25/rcnksk-our-lady-of-sorrows-chapel/
Meditation Chapel in Icheon Atelier Koma
https://www.dezeen.com/2024/01/21/atelier-koma-meditation-chapel/
Hometown Moon Chapel Syn Architects
https://www.dezeen.com/2021/10/28/syn-architects-hometown-moon-chapel-china-architecture/
Fuego Nuevo Chapel WRKSHP
https://www.dezeen.com/2021/10/12/concrete-travertine-minimalist-fuego-nuevo-chapel-mexico-wrkshp/
Church of Beatified Restituta Atelier Stepan
Church of St Wenceslas Atelier Stepan
https://www.dezeen.com/2017/08/26/church-st-wenceslas-atelier-stepan-sazovice-czech-republic/
One can sense the problems involved in attempting to embody some sense of solace in these special places. Kahn spoke of the process of creating place:
A great building must begin with the unmeasurable, must go through measurable means when it is being designed and in the end must be unmeasurable.
It is this unmeasurable that we confront when we are seeking a form for contemplation.
Kahn has spoken of this too:
“Form comes from wonder. Wonder stems from our ‘in touchness’ with how we were made. One senses that nature records the process of what it makes, so that in what it makes there is also the records of how it was made. In touch with this record we are in wonder. This wonder gives rise to knowledge. But knowledge is related to other knowledge and this relation gives a sense of order, a sense of how they inter-relate in a harmony that makes all things exist. From knowledge to sense of order we then wink at wonder and say ‘How am I doing, wonder?”
From The Notebooks & Drawings of Louis I Kahn.
Zumthor notes a similar notion, that there is more:
"In order to design buildings with a sensuous connection to life, one must think in a way that goes far beyond form and construction."
There is no set of rules that can be followed; the matter is personal, but it must never remain individually peculiar. We are not talking about the ‘self-expression’ identified by many artists today, ‘expressing myself,’ or anything to do with MY intimate, everyday feeling; nor are we talking about preferred signs. There are far more universal matters involved. Tradition has spoken about this, noting that if these things could be told, they would have been; but our era is keen to stride on with its own determination anchored in ‘the progress of the intellect’ determined by ‘the genius of the individual.’
We need to know more about these matters that involve a way of thinking, a subtle understanding of wholeness, if we are to embody meaning in a meaningful manner. We could start by displaying greater tolerance and humility in our efforts to establish a sensibility that can connect with these matters. It begins with the individual, but it is not individual.
One can see how easy it is to become kitsch; to reference matters that embody other connotations in spite of intentions; and how problematical it can be developing meaningful forms when precedent surrounds us. There is a depth here that requires an understanding and recognition that substantial personal matters are involved, but never in a personal way. This proposition is difficult for our era to contemplate when individualism is embraced and encouraged by social media and other digital involvements that confirm and empower ME. Just how we might manage these matters remains for each of us to discover; it has to happen if we are to appropriately deal with subtle, enriching issues.
We need to understand again the significance of symbols; and the reality that personal inspiration is misguided, will lead us astray, in spite of everything today promoting matters differently. That we seek out special places for contemplation is a beginning that could hold its own ironic revelatory outcome and establish roots for the engagement in matters of wonder that could blossom into form.
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