Deerlijk Masterplan and Theater


The Deerlijk assignement was twofold: to design a new community center, while simultaneously shaping a masterplan for the gradual transformation of Deerlijk’s public spaces.

With the existing building no longer fit to serve as a theater, a new performance hall rises just a few meters away, positioned in close dialogue with its predecessor. By cloaking both structures under a shared roof and unifying them within a singular architectural envelope, they merge into one coherent volume, crossed by a welcoming interior street.

This interior street, conceived as a sheltered extension of the public realm, operates as both passage and place. It threads northward into the new city park and southward toward the market square and its integrated parking.

The building further engages its context through carefully orchestrated openings: a generous foyer, a sunlit terrace, and two “city balconies”—one adjacent to the theater, the other to the artists’ quarters—each framing new perspectives on the town and its people.


*A new cultural central and master plan for village center (Architecture, Masterplan, Public Space), 2500 m2 / 2.7 ha, Deerlijk, Belgium, 2024, with New South + Lokus Landscape + Bureau Kiss + Ingenium + EMS + Daidalos Peutz

← Previous     Next →

Key elements of the project :


- A broken bond of trust between residents and public authorities.

- Intensive participation process with different audiences and stakeholders, with a specific focus on the inclusive use of public space.

- Participation tools used: bilateral consultations prior to collective forums, a project center, analog and digital communication tailored to the target audience.

- Programming exercise carried out with the community 



The Square Jacques Franck project aims to extrapolate the existing situation by increasing the number of activities (recreational, sporting, landscape) in order to dilute the current over-importance of the city stadium. A comb-like layout is proposed, alternating between programmed spaces (city stadium, play modules, commercial pavilion) and green spaces. Far from being a fixed form, this proposal serves as a framework for participatory actions, as it allows for the targeting of areas to be equipped and others to be planted with vegetation. This figure allows for the creation of a variety of spaces with different atmospheres and facilities, while ensuring a common identity. 


The traffic pattern has been redesigned to optimize car space without losing parking spaces, and to free the square from fast-moving traffic (bicycles, scooters) by organizing it on a green strip along the edge. A large part of the square is thus calmed and greened. Seven sub-spaces have been created, including three gardens. The city stadium is thus surrounded by two gardens containing various facilities (play modules, workout equipment, street furniture, vegetable beds, etc.), which will be specified during participatory workshops. 


During the four months of on-site consultations in the square, one of the most frequently criticized aspects of the current project concerned the benches: poorly positioned, uncomfortable, hard, and cold. After a detailed survey of the eight different types of benches present, we proposed several reconfigurations as well as wooden additions (backrests, seats) to improve their comfort and usability.