The new lookout point at Point Vue le Jambon in Vresse-sur-Semois is conceived as a discreet and respectful gesture within an exceptional landscape. Rather than asserting itself as an object, the project carefully embeds architecture into the terrain, allowing the site’s natural qualities to remain central to the experience.
The elliptical structure is shaped as a continuous, almost infinite stair that gently settles into the ground. This geometry guides visitors along a fluid and intuitive path toward the panoramic view over the Semois valley. From the road, the intervention remains nearly invisible, deliberately withholding the spectacle. The place reveals itself gradually: an introverted and sheltered atmosphere at the beginning transitions step by step into an expansive and impressive final vista. This sequence, from enclosed to open, was a key design intention and is carefully preserved and reinforced throughout the project.
No architectural statement competes with the landscape. Instead, the intervention creates the conditions for the site to speak for itself. A clear and restrained formal language, combined with a minimal number of constructive elements, ensures that the architecture remains secondary to the experience of place. The lookout does not frame the view aggressively; it simply supports and heightens the act of looking.
Ecological considerations played a central role in the design and construction. Existing vegetation was preserved to the greatest extent possible, and no trees were felled during execution. The structure aligns not only visually with its surroundings, but also with the site’s natural layers, rhythms, and topography.
More than a destination, the lookout functions as an invitation: to slow down, to observe, and to be present within the landscape. It proposes architecture as a mediator between body and territory, where movement, time, and perception are as important as form.