OFIS Arhitekti’s spotty stadium for FC BATE Borisov nears completion

Here are some wintery views of the new spotty stadium for Belarusian football club FC BATE Borisov designed by Slovenian firm OFIS Arhitekti, which is nearing completion and looks set to open later this year (+ slideshow).

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

The new Borisov Arena will replace FC BATE Borisov‘s existing home stadium, providing up to 13,000 seats for spectators on a new site to the south of the city centre.

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

OFIS Arhitekti designed the building with a domed shape, intended to resemble “fabric stretched over a skeleton”. The outer walls are clad with shimmering aluminium panels and are punctured by an assortment of blob-shaped windows.

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

Shops, bars and other visitor facilities will be located behind the facade at ground level, while staff offices, press rooms and VIP areas will occupy the level above.

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

The rounded shape of the arena is expected to improve acoustics during both training and matches.

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

Here’s a project description from OFIS Arhitekti:


Football Stadium Arena Borisov

The concept takes into account the natural advantages of the location and the existing interventions within the terrain, while maintaining as many of the existing trees on site as possible. Besides 13,000 seats there is additional 3,000 m2 of public space and are classified 4 stars according to UEFA categorisation. Traffic and parking is organised between the forest.

The arena forms a unified rounded dome, giving the impression of a single enclosed object. The skin of the dome gives an impression of a fragile stretched perforated textile pulled over the stadium skeleton. The covered space between the skin and the tribunes is a public street – a vestibule with public program (shops, bars, services, toilets) and galleries above (offices, VIP, press)

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

Internally, the rounded arena provides good acoustics and encourages an extrovert atmosphere from the players and the fans alike during the game, but focuses concentration during training time. The playing surface has N-S orientation, with a total area of 85 x 105m, on which 68 x 105m is used for playing. The remaining area allows enough space for the installation of advertising screens, photographers and cameras. The seats are arranged around the playing field in rows of 17 along the sides and rows of 27-28 along the short sides. The upper west gallery is reserved for press cabins, with seats and tables for 40 journalists and direct stair access to the press room and mix zone. In the east are the VIP stands, with 250 seats and bar and entertainment spaces. The VIP is accessed directly via an elevator from the entrance area with a car driveway. The athletes have a separate access on the lower platform, with passage to team buses and parking. At each entry point to the field are two dressing rooms, mix zone, physiotherapy and a space for doping control.

There are 4 floors with extra program and service facilities under the west stand area and 3 floors under the east side. The foyer for visitors is located on the first floor level and has 4 stairway access points. It is a covered plateau, naturally ventilated and unheated. Extending all around the inner stadium arena, this space contains the visitor’s toilets, bars, first-aid room and detention: it is a place to break during half-time. 3.000 m2 of public program is distributed at ground level on the north, south and east ends of the structure. In the east, a restaurant and bowling area are located. The restaurant prepares meals for the VIP during the match, with a service elevator for catering to the VIP lounge and bar within its public foyer. In the south, there are public fitness/gym studios. Other public area spaces are designed for various commercial activities. All restaurants have access from the public platform. Around the platform is a rounded pedestrian square, as a peripheral roundabout and meeting area. Parking pockets are organized into the existing forest area.

FC BATE Borisov Arena by Ofis Arhitekti

Architect: OFIS Arhitekti
Engineering and local office: Magnus Group
Client: FC Bate, County of Borisov

Location: Borisov, Belarus
Status: commission 2010
Construction 2011
Completion 2014
Program: football stadium + public program
Type: public + private
Area: public program 3,628 m2, offices 480 m2, service 2,000 m2
Capacity: audience 13,000 seats, VIP 620 seats, press seats 100, parking spaces 800
Structure: steel, reinforced concrete; roof structure- metal beams with aluminium cladding

The post OFIS Arhitekti’s spotty stadium for
FC BATE Borisov nears completion
appeared first on Dezeen.

Bar in the attic of an old house by Inblum Architects

Lithuanian studio Inblum Architects has inserted a bar into the attic of an old house in Minsk, Belarus (+ slideshow).

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

The building was reconstructed following damages caused during World War II and now accommodates offices on two floors. Inblum Architects was commissioned to design a bar for the uppermost floor, under the roof.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

The architects left brick walls exposed and used the same type of bricks to build a bar that runs along on side of the space.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

A wooden framework fits around the bar and extends along the walls, doubling as shelving and a coat rack. It also creates an overhead canopy that resembles a series of rafters, which lowers the ceiling height on that side and makes the space feel more intimate.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

“When we started designing this bar our goal was to create a space with its own unique atmosphere where old and new mix together in a perfect way,” architect Dmitrij Kudin told Dezeen.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

Second-hand furniture surrounds the bar and was sourced from various places including an old school in Ireland and flea markets in Sweden.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

“Imagine an old attic where you can find all sorts of old things that tell their own story; your secret hideaway from your childhood games,” Kudin said. “And now, when you are grown up you come back to it, clean up the space, use the furniture you have found and make a place for yourself and your friends where you can have a drink and chat about the old days.”

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

Brick-shaped pieces of mirror are attached to the wall behind the bar, as well as next to washbasins in the bathroom, while garlands of exposed lightbulbs have been strung around the wooden canopy.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

The building is set into a hillside and visitors can access the bar directly from the street via a small wooden deck that offers views across the surrounding rooftops.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

Photography is by Darius Petrulaitis.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Attic Bar – (Cherdak Bar)

This bar in the attic of a newly rebuilt house in Minsk Old Town stands out as an example of honest use of raw materials. The original brickwork is left bare, the bar counter is executed in the same brick.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

Two main features organise the space. First, it is a multifunctional structure in pine boards, which spans across the entire space. It has a bar, a lamp, a shelf and a coat rack. Taken together, it highlights the space as an archetypal attic. Second, it is a soft seating structure occupying an otherwise unusable space found under a low ceiling.

The dividing elements “mirror” the sloped ceiling, so the space becomes complete. Smaller objects of the interior, new or old, have been carefully collected by architects from different sources.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

The old-fashioned garland comes from USA, the bar stools are from brilliant German designers, old chairs come from a school in Ireland, a number of armchairs bought in Lithuania and renovated date back to the Soviet period, other objects come from Swedish flea markets.

Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects

Here the architects’ prime concern has been to create a certain atmosphere, no wonder the place has acquired a unique soul.

“Reminiscences of childhood, inspiration and throes of creation, the smell of an old wooden house, mirrors reflecting fragments of our life, the truth of a character and a material, a nostalgia for the gone incandescent light bulb, paying a due tribute to these days of our life” – this is what we thought of and felt while designing this bar.

Floor plan of Bar in an attic space in Minsk by Inblum Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image

Design by Inblum Architects, Vilnius, Lithuania
Team: Dmitrij Kudin, Laura Malcaite
Assistant: Janina Basova
Location: Minsk, Belarus
Year of design and construction: 2013

The post Bar in the attic of an old house
by Inblum Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Yury Ustsinau

Retour sur les travaux et oeuvres de l’illustrateur allemand Yury Ustsinau, basé à Frankfurt. Un univers graphique sombre et très réussi, jouant sur les reliefs ainsi que le noir et blanc. L’ensemble est à découvrir en images sur son portfolio et dans la suite de l’article.



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