Town Hall Midden-Delfland by Inbo

This glazed town hall in the Netherlands by Dutch architecture studio Inbo has thatched roofing folding over all five of its huge curved profiles (+ slideshow).

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Located in Schipluiden, the municipal centre of Midden-Delfland, the town hall comprises a row of five alternating volumes designed by Inbo to match the forms of the surrounding hills.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Inspired by the farmhouses typical in the region, the building has a thatched roof made from metre-long strands of reed. Unlike a traditional thatched roof, which could pose a significant fire hazard, the reeds are wrapped tightly around a system of prefabricated panels.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: photograph is by the architects

“In old barns fires would quickly grow because of the air feeding the fire from below,” architect Arnold Homan told Dezeen, “but here there are big prefabricated panels forming the understurcture beneath the reeds. The reeds are stitched over the panelling, no air can reach them.”

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: photograph is by the architects

The thatching clads all surfaces of the roof that are visible at ground level, while the uppermost sections are covered with a mixture of sedum and photovoltaic solar panels. “It looks like the reed is all over the building from beginning to end, but that’s not actually the case,” explained Homan.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: photograph is by the architects

The three largest sections of the building accommodate the municipal offices of the Midden-Delfland Town Hall, while the two smaller blocks are sandwiched between to create an entrance foyer and public hall.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: photograph is by the architects

Windows line the north and south facades of each block to bring natural light through every room in the building. More solar panels are mounted around the glazing and double-up as solar shades.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Inbo also designed the interiors of the building, adding paving slabs to the floor of the entrance hall, teardrop-shaped lighting and wooden fittings built from locally sourced timber.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Other projects by Amsterdam studio Inbo include a technology company headquarters designed to look like a meteorite.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

See more thatched architecture on Dezeen, including a thatched visitor centre for birdwatchers in Sweden and a thatched bar in Vietnam.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Photography is by Auke van der Weide, apart from where otherwise stated.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Here’s a project description from Inbo:


Town Hall Midden-Delfland
Schipluiden (NL)

The small municipality of Midden-Delfland is a green recreational enclave in the industrialised south wing of the Randstad, Netherlands. This vulnerable setting inspired the architects of Inbo, Arnold Homan and Jeroen Simons, in their design for its new town hall. Inbo designed a characteristic building, using the distinctive polder landscape of Midden-Delfland as a leading theme on multiple scale levels. The town hall presents itself like a visitor centre: an approachable, accessible building that interacts with its surroundings. This sustainable residence of Netherlands first Cittaslow-municipality – with its core values quality of life and slow food – presents itself in an inviting and precious icon.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

The town hall has been awarded an A label on energy efficiency and a sustainability score of 235 (Greencalc). This carbon neutral building is literally fed by the landscape. Natural underground wells are utilised for heat and cold storage, regulating the buildings climate. The design choices in the building its shape and materialisation support the high standards for sustainability. The thick thatched roof and triple glazing façades ensure a high level of insulation. Solar cells integrated in the facade generate electricity and serve as sunscreens as well.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Located at the very edge of the village of Schipluiden, Inbo choose to adapt the grammar of the polder landscape in the concept of the town hall. The building consists of five alternating volumes corresponding with the parceling of the polder landscape. Three office volumes enclose the daylight volumes of the entrance hall and the public hall volume. The town hall is covered by a softly folded thatched roof, the distinct eye catcher. This roof is inspired by the typical farmhouses in Midden-Delfland and the differences in height of the polder landscape: it contrasts with the transparent façades.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: site plan

The three storey building is set against a characteristic dyke of the river Gaag. The central position of public spaces on first floor level, such as the public hall with vista across the Gaag river, serves the client-management concept. The spatial entrance hall bathes in daylight, bridging the differences in height between polder and river level by two easily accessible entrances. The perfect position for taking wise decisions about the future of Midden-Delfland has been created by positioning the double high council chamber on first level at the far end of the building: its backfolded roofshape frames the view across the adjacent polder landscape.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: ground floor plan – click for larger image

The interior reflects the character of Midden-Delfland. The essence of the building is a modest design and use of natural materials. The tiled floor for the public hall refers to the characteristic floors in traditional farmhouses. The carpet pattern throughout the offices resembles an aerial view of a polder landscape. The street pavement on polder level continues into the entrance hall. In the interior elements, such as facades, counters, pantries and the council table, native wood has been applied. A dynamic and open work environment has been created, generating views into public hall and entrance hall, and towards is surroundings: river, village and polder. The town hall is literally connected to the landscape.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: first floor plan – click for larger image

With its new town hall, the municipality of Midden-Delfland wants to set a sustainable example for its inhabitants and display its core values nationwide.

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: second floor plan – click for larger image

Client and occupant: Gemeentehuis Midden-Delfland
Function: town hall with a council chamber, offices (various office concepts), restaurant, public space with counters, police post, fire department post
Specialities: Residence of Netherlands first Cittaslow-municipality
Surface: 5966 m2 (fire department post 700 m2, offices 3876 m2, public functions 1390 m2)

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: block one section – click for larger image

Design: 2007
Start realisation: May 2011
Completion: September 2012

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: block two section – click for larger image

Architect: Inbo
Project architect: Arnold Homan en Jeroen Simons
Team members: Ben van der Wal, Arie de Jong, Maarten Hooijmeijer, Erik Berg

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: block three section – click for larger image

Urban design: DN Urbland te Den Haag (NL)
Interior design: Inbo (NL)
Structural engineering: Bartels, Utrecht (NL)
Installations engineering: Vintis installatietechniek, Zoetermeer (NL)

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: block four section – click for larger image

Contractor: Bouwonderneming Stout B.V., Hardinxveld-Giessendam (NL)
Building management: Stevens Van Dijck, Zoetermeer (NL)
Others: LBP Utrecht (NL) (akoestiek, bouwfysica, brandveiligheid)

Town Hall Midden-Delfland Schipluiden by Inbo

Above: block five section – click for larger image

The post Town Hall Midden-Delfland
by Inbo
appeared first on Dezeen.

Baeza Town Hall by Viar Estudio

Baeza Town Hall

Patchy timber shields the glazed upper storeys of this extension to a historic town hall in southern Spain by architects Viar Estudio.

Baeza Town Hall

The extension creates a new entrance courtyard at the side of the original 16th Century town hall, a former prison decorated in the Plateresque style in the centre of the World Heritage town of Baeza.

Baeza Town Hall

Above the glazed doors to the extension, an extended first floor cantilevers outwards to shelter arriving visitors.

Baeza Town Hall

This first floor also bridges across from the rear of the building to connect with a second block just behind.

Baeza Town Hall

This new four-storey building has the same timber shades across its extruded windows and features a wooden staircase that ascends in front of a shimmering golden wall.

Baeza Town Hall

The interior walls of the original town hall remain exposed and intact, so the junctions between new and old are highlighted.

Baeza Town Hall

See more recent projects from Spain here, including an outdoor swimming pool and a concrete sculpture museum.

Baeza Town Hall

Photography is by Fernando Alda and you can see more pictures of this project on his website.

Baeza Town Hall

Here’s some more information from Viar Estudio:


The Baeza Township Project has been read as a unit in a duration, as a constant change process where the new design has been thought as an additional stratum, as the last sediment layer in time the building has created. The thought about the temporal process of architecture is fundamental.

Baeza Town Hall

Historical architecture is based on overlays, accumulating many different pasts in what could be called the «durée» of architecture.

Baeza Town Hall

Henri Bergson said that the ultimate reality is not the being, nor the changing being, but the continuous process of change which he called «durée» or duration.

Baeza Town Hall

Architecture has a way of being in time, a becoming that lasts, a change that is substance on its own.

Baeza Town Hall

The rythm of the duration and of the successive changes connotes a dissolution process, subtraction, addition, mutation or a change of uses that befalls all architectural ensembles through time.

Baeza Town Hall

The Baeza Township Project is entwined within the concept of architectural «durée».

Baeza Town Hall

It is designed thinking about the additive condition of the site, in the quality of change as the substance of the project and as a part of the character of the building in time.

Baeza Town Hall

The mixed state of -perception/memory- is what makes us see objects as a continuum, as relationship nodes.

Baeza Town Hall

Thus, when we think, design or build our memory –which is also duration- is imprinted in the objects and architecture becomes a way of inscribing time on matter.

Baeza Town Hall

Man’s impression in every manipulated object –material or speculative- sets us in a place in time because as we build, pile, glue or pour we change the geologic, industrial or poetic time of matter humanizing it, making it ours, giving it –as we impress our vital time in it – a human breath.

Baeza Town Hall

The fundamental question: How do we understand the historic building?

Baeza Town Hall

The answer rose slowly; we think of the building as a fragment –almost a stump-, as an element enwrapped in itself, with no ability to suggest, nor create, nor to define its own structure.

Baeza Town Hall

The strategy was to clean up the building’s additions, to accept the historic building as an unfinished fragment and to envelop it with new construction.

Baeza Town Hall

The historical building –the fragment- does not create a new building; it is the town’s logic which generates, encloses and wraps the existing fragment; it is the spontaneous city growth, the organic structure of its patios what hugs it.

Baeza Town Hall

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Baeza Town Hall

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Baeza Town Hall

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Baeza Town Hall

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Baeza Town Hall

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Baeza Town Hall

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Baeza Town Hall

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City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

This asymmetric white building bridges the two existing halves of a town hall in the Belgian municipality of Harelbeke.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Local architects Dehullu & Partners designed the structure to provide an entrance reception for the hall, as well as new meeting rooms and a tourist information centre.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

The white panels that clad the facade are made from Corian and they skew upwards to partially screen a balcony on the second floor.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Grey and white tiles create chequered floors inside meeting rooms and offices, while suspended rectangular lights illuminate a desk in the reception area.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Staircases and lifts are strategically located to overcome the issue that floor heights in the two existing buildings do not correspond.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Another unusual town hall from the Dezeen archive is composed of overlapping cylinders – see it here.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Photography is by Tim Van de Velde.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Here’s some more information from Bert Dehullu:


The Town Hall of Harelbeke, Belgium by Dehullu-Architects (text 21/03/2012).

The works that have been conducted are part of a masterplan that was developped in 2007. Due to the growing needs of the city services, the Town Hall was looking for an extension of their site.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

In order to anticipate these growing needs a masterplan was developped. In this plan the historic site of a 19th century flax-factory was incorporated in the new site of the Town Hall.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Redevelopping the new site, a new entrance building was designed, centrally located between two existing historically valuable buildings.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

The new entrance building links it’s adjacent buildings. None of the floors of these neighbouring buildings were corresponding.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

The challenge was to make all of the floors accessible for wheelchair users. Therefore the location of elevators and staircases was very carefully thought of.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Since it’s central location in the city, the new entrance building was designed to be a contemporary ‘landmark’ on the main road of Harelbeke. Therefore the cladding of the facade and the roof was executed in a dirt repelling white material.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

The material is a mineral substance of the brand Corian. It is the first time in Belgium that this material is used as exterior cladding.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Furthermore, part of the historical flax-factory was renovated. The walls and roof of this part were carefully preserved and restored according to the recommendations of the institute of cultural heritage.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

On the inside of this historical part, the pattern of the tiled floors refer to a weaving technique, to make the link with the history of this building.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Click above for larger image

Sustainability was an important aspect in the building process.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

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No cooling was installed in this office building. Due to the high degree of isolation, the use of windowblinds and the white colour of the cladding, overheating of the building can be avoided for the Belgian mild summer climate.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

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In a next phase the central spot in the site will be transformed into an atrium, in order to centralise all of the city services so the current and future needs of the civilians can easily be satisfied.

City Hall Harelbeke by Dehullu & Partners

Lalìn Townhall by Mansilla+Tuñón

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

Photographer Roland Halbe has sent us some images of this town hall in Spain composed of overlapping cylinders, designed by Madrid architects Mansilla+Tuñón.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

Horizontal bands of the modular glass facade are screened, giving the Lalìn Townhall a striped turquoise exterior.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

A large circular void in the building’s volume creates a central courtyard, where the entrance is located.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

Internally, a spiralling staircase at the heart of the building connects the ground and first floors.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

More architecture photographed by Roland Halbe on Dezeen »

The following text is from Mansilla+Tuñón:


Lalìn Townhall
Mansilla+Tuñón Architects

While the present is under construction, the past and the future take new forms. Every single moment, each new action, enables a revision of what has been done, and also lends a new profile to what is about be done, modifying continously as much the collective memory as the projects to come.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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In this changing scenario, with a past and a future in constant construction, PROBABILITY becomes the only appearance possible of certainty; it is the only face that allows looking into reality.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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In the heart of this transformation, architecture focuses its view attention in a broader sense, considering the definition of space as only a small part of the assignment to what is called: The construction of ARTIFICIAL ENVIRONMENTS, of the ATMOSPHERE in which the actions of mankind are developed.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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This is a kind of MOBILIZATION OF THE WORLD in which the principal tool is the negotiation between the parts and the OBJECTIVE is the creation of SCENARIOS OF WILLS that will encourage the collective identity.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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In this way, the proposal for the Concello of Lalín oscilates between precision and probability, building an ANTIMONUMENTAL STRUCTURE in which, as in the clouds, each one can guess the changing shapes of the personal references, so that the COLLECTIVE IDENTIFICATION is the result of the diversity of each interpretation: a TECHNOLOGICAL CELTIC VILLAGE, some colored clouds, a civic palimsesto, a patterned fabric, etc.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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An OPEN STRUCTURE is proposed, almost a mathematical field, that establishing a local main behavior system, impacts against the dialogue with the environment in front of indifferent autism, chosing the DISPERSED thing against the compact thing, the TRANSPARENT thing against the opaque thing and the DIFFUSE thing against the limited; finally, a social and architectural structure without any kind of hierarchie.

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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All in all, this is a matter of confronting what we think to be with what surrounds us, so that, what is most important is the capacity to multiply, to intensify and to diversify, the relationships between HUMANS and NON-HUMAN, otherwise it is a matter of doing present that we are nothing less but also nothing more, than a small part of a world that turns without stop, tirelessly…

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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Credits

Principals-in-charge: Luis M. Mansilla & Emilio Tuñón Álvarez
Location: Lalín (Pontevedra)
Client: Lalín Town Hall
Site area: 6,760 sq m
Total floor area: 2,842 sq m
Building area: 7,200 sq m

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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Cost of construction: 15,000,000 euros
Competition team: Andrés Regueiro, Luis Díaz-Mauriño, Carlos Martínez de Albornoz, Anna Partenheimer, María Langarita, Asa Nakano.
Model makers: HCH Models
Competition date: November 2004

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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Project team: Andrés Regueiro, Matilde Peralta, María Langarita, Ana del Arenal, Asa Nakano, Bárbara Silva.
Quantity surveyor: Sancho Páramo
Structural engineer: Alfonso Gómez Gaite
Mechanical engineer: Quicler-López ingenieros
Design years: from November 2004 to July 2005

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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Construction directors: Emilio Tuñon y Luis M. Mansilla
Construction surveyor: Sancho Páramo
Construction team: Andrés Regueiro, Sara Murado, Carlos Brage, Briony Roberts, Rubén Arend, Nuria Martínez Salas, Coco Castillón, Elke Gmyrek, Carlos Cerezo, Alfonso Gómez Gaite (structural), Quicler-López Ingenieros (mechanical)
General contractor: FCC Construcción
Construction years: from November 2005 to Febraury 2011

Townhall Lalìn/E by Mansilla+Tuñón

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See also:

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Zaisa Office Tower
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Mensa Triangle
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Rolex Learning Centre
by SANAA