Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Dutch architect Erick van Egeraat has completed a mixed-use block in Hamburg with a facade that parts like a pair of red curtains.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Located in the Hafencity development area of the city, the ten-storey Sumatrakontor is clad in stone that references the red colour of brick buildings nearby on the harbour.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Shops line the building at ground level, while offices, luxury apartments and a five star hotel are contained in the floors above.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Where the facade parts, glazing screens a ground-floor lobby that extends up through the full height of the building.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Erick van Egeraat also recently completed an underground museum extension – see it here and see more projects by the architect here.

Photography is by J Collingridge.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Erick van Egeraat completes ‘Sumatrakontor’ in Hamburg

At Hamburg Hafencity the brand new ‘ Sumatrakontor ‘ by Dutch Architect Erick van Egeraat was officially opened. The 37.000 sq-metre, ten story – multifunctional building houses a variety of inner-urban functions such as; a five-star Hotel, Offices and Conference rooms, retail, high-end housing and an underground parking garage.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

The office and conference spaces maximize the variety in use due to the flexible structure offering units from 400 to 4.000m2. The retail in the lower floors ensure vitality in use and dynamics throughout the day. Erick van Egeraat’s design refers to the richly detailed existing red-brick harbor buildings of the ‘Speicherstad’  but does so in a contemporary manner. The large volume appears to be ‘cut’ in 4 different volumes and this is underlined by a specific dialectic play between glass, aluminium and red natural stone slabs for each of the different volumes. The inner courtyard on the other hand emphasises on the calm comfort of the traditional white plastered facades in the city center of Hamburg.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

“I wanted to elaborate on the existing quality of this historic waterfront in a contemporary manner, so the Sumatrakontor needed to combine a number of qualities in both function and appearance. In this way the building really becomes an attribution in the activation of the city “ says Erick van Egeraat.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

Whilst the original Masterplan set out to develop the ‘ Hafencity ‘ with simple building blocks, Erick van Egeraat’s interpretation is an evolution. In a playful manner the Sumatrakontor evolves upon the urban-rules set out in the masterplan, but it also leaves room for chance, for interpretation. One of the ‘cuts’ in the northern façade creates a void which in itself is the access to the inner courtyard. This courtyard is the inhabitants private garden in a environment which is largely dominated by stone.

Sumatrakontor by Erick van Egeraat

The Sumatrakontor was initially developed by property investors ING REim, SNS property finance and Gross + Partners the latter was recently acquired by real estate investor Pramerica.

On an urban scale, the building’s shape allows a semi-public space and stimulates social interaction, while its architectonic appearance strongly relates to the character of Hamburg. The new building designed by Erick van Egeraat and his team is therefore a perfect example of the specific theme Erick van Egeraat introduced in his design for the Überseequarter: connecting the inner city with the revitalized waterfront and making the Überseequartier an integral part of the new and dynamic 21st century Hamburg.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

Architects Stephen Williams Associates have completed a hotel that looks like a shipping warehouse beside the harbour in Hamburg.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

Named the 25hours Hafencity, the hotel features a ground-floor lounge with gridded markings on the floor and a conference room inside a freight container.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

Visitors check in at a desk of plywood boxes and can pile up their luggage on industrial trolleys.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

Each room comes with a trunk that hinges open to reveal a desk stocked with drinks, a logbook, information packs and electrical sockets.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

A boxing punch-bag and bespoke sit-up chairs are all that comprises the hotel gym, but neither is sheltered from the rain.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

A row of telephones boxes made from salt-bleached driftwood house Skype booths for guests, while a printer can be found inside a rusty metal cage.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

The hotel is located in the Hafencity development area in southern Hamburg and is our second story this week from the district – see our earlier story about a canteen with a spotty ceiling and see all our stories about Hafencity here.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

Here’s some more information from Stephen Williams Associates:


A modern maritime story: the 25hours Hotel Hafencity

Hamburg’s Hafencity is one of the most ambitious urban construction sites in Europe. A new district is emerging creating a lively city quarter, a microcosm of modern life where people come together, mingle, confer and celebrate. So it was the idea behind the new 25hours Hotel Hafencity to give this new district a new „living room“ in the heart of the Hafencity.

“We wanted to create a web of meaning with interrelating signs and symbols referring to seafaring and harbour life. A place where old and new stories come to life,” describes the British Architect and Designer Stephen Williams. It all began from the poems of Joachim Ringelnatz with the fictitious sailor Kuttel Daddeldu, a good soul who’s deeply rooted in the seafaring life, but also coarse and a little cheeky.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

From the projects inception the idea of a multi-disciplinary team played an important role – The client was an integral part of the design team from day one and formed part of a creative collective co-ordinated by Stephen Williams Associates. The ultimate user-generated architecture where all participants bounced ideas within spacial structures – a storyteller, an event agency and an illustrator giving meaning at all levels. “We worked together like story editors in epic TV-series where a team of writers and professionals with different backgrounds fiddle about to get the perfect story that works at various levels: truly reflect life and it’s meaning,” says Stephen Williams. “It could be considered, that our role is a like that of director of space balancing narrative identity with feasibility and, on top producing unique ideas.”

Modern seamen or ‘maritime nomads’ have something in common with travellers, dubbed as ‘urban nomads’: mobility. In search of this spirit, Markus Stoll, a storyteller for brands, interviewed 25 international sailors in the Seaman’s Club Duckdalben in Hamburg. Passionate about the contemporary notion of the seafaring world, he adapted the first-hand accounts into semifictional stories that became one of the guiding themes of the hotel’s concept.

The seamen’s stories were illustrated by Jindrich Novotny and appear not only on wall surfaces but also in specially created log books in each room.

Guests when retreating to their rooms experience the intimacy of cabins. Conventional furniture replaced with built-in elements and a ‘travel trunk’ providing the visitor with all that they will require: information, log book, drinks, working space with writing instruments and electrical connections. The sea trunk and its contents evoke the emotion of a transitory existence, the seafarer now on land for a short period with all his belongings.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

The hotel offers a classical typology of spaces but comes up with surprising interpretations. The rooms are cabin-style suites, the business center is called the ‘Radio Room’. Privacy is catered with 3 Telephone boxes built from salt bleached driftwood, to include skype. Business and private travellers alike have everything they need including a printer located in a rusty metal cage – the ‘Radio Room’‚ a communication point for a new breed of business traveller.

The ‘Hafen Sauna’ is on the rooftop built within a rusty container with panoramic views over the industrial harbour. It is the furthest from wellness that one could imagine. Fitness is achieved by punching a boxing bag and sit-ups on a specially designed seat from Stephen Williams has the roughness a sailor would appreciate. Not only that it is not protected from the Hamburg weather but even the showers are outside.

The ground floor, with discrete lobby, restaurant, bar and shop presents a comfortable version of harbour living, and is the hub of the hotel. It is a public space of inclusivity that invites guests or non-guests to stay and drop in.

There is no fear of being asked by some stiff concierge if you need any help, the buzz of the lobby is a democratic coming and going of all types, the staff in Breton shirts and red neckties augmenting a space with no sign of cliche. Furniture chosen by Connie Kotte  has the patina of years which makes it seem as this industrial space has been there for ever. The import export warehouse has become the living room in the Harbour city but here people are the commodities coming in and going, as it would seem with the natural elements of wind and tide.

The 25hours Hotel Hafencity by Stephen Williams Associates

Hapag-Lloyd, Hamburg’s well known shipping company kindly donated a shipping container which forms one of the conference rooms and overspill from the restaurant for larger groups. The movable container wall hoisted up to the ceiling to allow access, a reference to the nearby container cranes in constant movement.

Every seafarer longs for home: HEIMAT Küche + Bar is the restaurant of the hotel (in German ‘Heimat’ means ‘Home’) in an elegant industrial aesthetic. Warehouse shelves, rough wooden boxes, floor markings, stacks of oriental carpets and an eclectic range of maritime finds are not decorative but usable storage space for this multifunctional room. Furniture which can be stored, moved around and configurated when wished. Floor markings give an order to many different seating typologies.

“We want to create a space of cultural relevance”, summarizes Stephen Williams. “That for me is linked to the understanding of social structures and how people define themselves within space and how they relate to each other. I would term it ‘designing the invisible’  – spaces, not objects, provide the framework essential to influence human behaviour. Objects are just like characters in the script, they are not the story itself. It is the interplay that brings this to life, the context of spatial sequences. To achieve democratic spaces where everyone can feel comfortable and be who they are is worth achieving. Then we have created the true living room of the Harbour city.

Architecture can only be the backdrop for human activity and not an end in itself.The 25hours Hotel Hafencity is a place to interact, explore and to be oneself. And like all journeys the discovery of something new. A destination to be and start exploring by yourself.”