Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

A smooth, curved concrete shell forms the exterior of this art studio in Boeotia, central Greece by Athens studio A31 Architecture (+ slideshow).

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

A31 Architecture designed the space as a combined studio and gallery for an artist, creating a place adjacent to his home where he can hang paintings and simultaneously construct large sculptures.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

A wooden door is set into the double-height glass-fronted entrance, accessed by an open concrete patio area.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

Inside, floating steps protrude out from the side of one wall in the large downstairs workspace, leading to a mezzanine attic level that is used for storage.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

The concrete steps also double as exhibition space for small sculptures.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

Thin sections of concrete have been cut from the exterior to form windows and the blocks that were removed are now in use as benches and plinths.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

“The space created is open, friendly, solemn, and simple,” said architect Praxitelis Kondylis. “It forms part of the nature as if it has been standing there for ages.”

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

Other warehouses we’ve featured include one with an orthogonal exterior made from clay bricks infused with metal shavings, a former slaughterhouse with reclaimed roof tiles and a textile warehouse clad in white stone.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

See more warehouses »
See more architecture and design in Greece »

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

Photography is by Yiannis Hadjiaslanis.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Art Warehouse in Boeotia, Greece

The Artist’s warehouse is a monolithic Modern structure. Its orthogonal plan is divided into three zones: firstly, the cantilever with the balcony in the south, where the entrance is situated. Secondly, the artist’s workspace and finally the attic in the north which serves as a storage space.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
Site plan – click for larger image

A straight staircase connects the two levels, while the cantilevered concrete steps can serve as exhibition stands for the artist’s work.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
Ground floor and mezzanine plans

The most important demand was an open space structure of a significant height suitable to the needs of the artist in order for him to hang paintings and construct huge sculptures.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
Section

Another wish has been the integration of the new structure with the surrounding nature. A part of the landscape was incorporated in the open-space sculpture gallery, hosting the artist’s creations.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
Detailed end section

The space created is open, friendly, solemn, and simple. It forms part of the nature as if it has been standing there for ages. It’s dome, a timeless and interregional architectural coronation element spanning from antiquity to Modernism, interacts with the intimate space of the artists house, the “cell”.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
East facade

The wall openings, which relate to the Sun’s trajectory, the interior lighting and the ventilation, stem from transverse horizontal sections in the building shell. The sliced concrete blocks that are removed now function as benches for people and pedestals for sculptures.

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
West facade

Architect: A31 Architecture (Architect and project author – Praxitelis Kondylis)
Structural Design: A31 Construction (Engineer – Panagiotis Karras)
Construction: A31 Architecture and Construction Ltd
Plan Area: 4.000 m2
Building Area: 75 m2
Budget: 70.000 Euros
Client: Alexander Liappis, Painter
Spot: Dilesi, Boeotia, Greece

Art Warehouse in Boeotia by A31 Architecture
End facade

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by A31 Architecture
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Transitlager by BIG

Transitlager by BIG

Bjarke Ingels Group have won a competition to convert a Basel warehouse with their design for an extension that will zigzag across the roof like a bolt of lightening.

Transitlager by BIG

The Danish architects propose to convert the industrial Transitlager building into offices, apartments and galleries.

Transitlager by BIG

The apartments are to occupy the three new upper floors and will open out onto triangular rooftop gardens.

Transitlager by BIG

Four storeys inside the existing concrete warehouse will house offices and galleries, facing a new public square proposed by site masterplanners Herzog & de Meuron.

Transitlager by BIG

Other projects by BIG on Dezeen include a power plant that doubles up as a ski slope and a centre for women’s sportssee more projects by BIG here.

Transitlager by BIG

Here’s some more information from BIG:


BIG Transforms Transitlager In Switzerland

BIG wins an invited competition to renovate and extend an existing 1960′s concrete warehouse situated in a Basel industrial district which is being transformed into an alternative Arts District.

Transitlager by BIG

Located in Basel’s upcoming Dreispitz neighborhood, which is envisioned as an attractive and inviting urban quarter in Herzog de Meuron’s master plan from 2003, the existing 18.000 m2 ”Transitlager” built in the late 1960s is to be renovated and extended by up to 7.000 m2 for residential and commercial purposes.

Transitlager by BIG

The development is undertaken by St. Gallen -based real estate development company Nüesch Development for the landlord, the Christoph Merian Foundation and investor the UBS (CH) Property Fund – Swiss Mixed ‘Sima’.

Transitlager by BIG

The winning entry which included engineers Bollinger Grohmann and HL Technik was chosen among proposals from Harry Gugger Studio and Lacaton Vassal among others.

Transitlager by BIG

The Transitlager’s surrounding industrial area is characterized by the geometries of infrastructures – the intersecting railways, loading docks and turning radiuses that weave through the city and create a puzzle of linear buildings with pointy corners and staggered façade lines into an untraditional and adventurous urban area consisting of galleries, restaurants and creative businesses.

Transitlager by BIG

The iconic character of the existing Transitlager, its generous surrounding public spaces, and connection to the city’s botanical garden makes the building a natural focal point of the Arts District.

Transitlager by BIG

By re-programming and extending the former warehouse into a multifunctional series of floors for various uses, BIG proposes a cross breed of art, commerce, working and living.

Transitlager by BIG

Two distinct buildings on top of each other form a mixed-use hybrid with activity and life 24 hours a day.

Transitlager by BIG

“We propose a transformation of the Transitlager that builds on the industrial logic of the existing building and of the surrounding area. The extension doubles the size of the Transitlager and becomes an opposite twin – based on the same structure, but with a different geometry. The combined building becomes a spectrum of optimal conditions: From open and flexible plans to tailor made units, public programs to private residences, vibrant urban space to peaceful green gardens and from cool industrial to warm and refined. ” Andreas Klok Pedersen, Partner, BIG.

Transitlager by BIG

The wide dimensions of the former warehouse, the mix of programs, the structural limits and the sun orientation creates a typology that is neither point house nor slab – a folded geometry adapted to the specifics of the existing structure and optimized for daylight and views.

Transitlager by BIG

The staggered edge and pointy ends echoes the geometries of the industrial buildings of the neighborhood, creating a surprising familiarity with the heterogeneous surroundings.

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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Transitlager by BIG

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See also:

.

West 57th
by BIG
PUU-BO
by BIG
TEK
by BIG

Fort Cortina by Karelse & den Besten

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

Clay bricks infused with metal shavings make up the orthogonal exterior of an office and warehouse in Amsterdam designed by a graphic design agency.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

Rotterdam studio Karelse & den Besten, who usually design brochures and logos, completed for the headquarters for gift retailer Cortina alongside a construction management team from TPAGH architecten.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

The wharf building named Fort Cortina is located on the site of a former shipyard and was modelled on traditional Moroccan forts.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

Behind the brick exterior, three floors of offices and stockrooms surround a cedar-lined courtyard at the building’s centre.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

Staggered floor plates create balconies overlooking this courtyard, while additional terraces can be found on the building’s sedum room.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

A few other large buildings with brick exteriors have recently been featured on Dezeen – see our earlier stories about a community centre in Hungary punctured by square windows and apartment blocks in Prague with herringbone patterned facades.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

Photography is by Sjaak Henselmans, Marcel van der Burg and Jan Derwig.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

The following details are from the architects:


Fort Cortina

As a graphic design agency we already had a long cooperation with Cortina, a wholesale in gift items, before they asked us to design their new headquarters. It was our first architectural assignment.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

Fort Cortina is built on the premises of the NDSM-wharf, a former shipyard located on the banks of the river IJ in Amsterdam.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

In this harsh environment we designed an office and warehouse building that looks like a Morrocan fort.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

A monolithic structure, rough on the outside with metallized brick walls and smooth on the inside patios that are lined with cedar wood.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

The dynamic lay-out of the facades is a reflection of the different rooms that vary in height and size. A result of our intention to make an exciting interior with small and big views over the river. Rooms to hide and rooms to expose.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

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A commercial building that almost fits like a home. The patios at the hearth of the building are inspired on a monastery tour.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

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A space for reflection and a way to give light to the interior and to create outdoor recreation areas with footpaths on the roof, which is planted with sedum for an optimal indoor climate control.

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

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Architects: Karelse & den Besten, Rotterdam
Location: Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Project year: 2008
Project area: 1000 sqm

Fort Cortina by Karelse and den Besten

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Cliënt: Cortina, Amsterdam
Project management: TPAGH architecten, Hoorn
Contractor: Klies & Jozef Bouw, Volendam


See also:

.

Office Building by ModostudioOffice by
24H architecture
Rooftop Office by Dagli+ Atelier

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Stacks of reclaimed roof tiles form walls inside this former slaughterhouse in Madrid by Spanish architect Arturo Franco.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Refurbished in 2009 for administrative use, Warehouse 8B contains an office, a stockroom and an event space.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

The recycled clay tiles were reclaimed from the warehouse roof when it was replaced.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Lines of missing tiles create narrow apertures in the partition walls.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

More projects in Spain on Dezeen »

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Photography is by Carlos Fernandez Piñar.

The following information was provided by the architects:


In a small warehouse of the old slaughterhouse of Madrid, warehouse 8B, the tiles in bad condition have been removed from the roof, been stacked and been put inside to solve a problem. This could be the summary of the intervention.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

The slaughterhouse of Madrid was projected around 1907 and built during the second decade of the 20th century by Luis Bellido, municipal architect. For almost sixty years it served as a great pantry for the centre area. During this time it demonstrated its functional virtues and its special characteristics only too well. With the passing of time, the style applied to its façades, has become a more questionable matter, as it is far from the first approximations to the Modern Movement that was already being explored in this sort of industrial building in Germany, Holland or France. During the eighties, the slaughterhouse was moved to the outskirts of the city. The small “industrial city” projected by Bellido fell into neglect and oblivion. For the past few years, the town council of Madrid has been trying to convert this deteriorated complex into an avant-garde cultural engine for the city.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Warehouse 8B will be the space destined for administrative management. It will be composed of a small working area, a stockroom and a multi-purpose space for talks or presentations. Originally they were back-up rooms for the storage of waste produced in warehouse no.8, where skins and salted meat were dried. A minor warehouse but of great spatial interest.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

The priority of the intervention was to replace a roof of flat shingle tiles over boards and successively patched thin, hollow bricks, to carry out a structural reinforcement of the whole set, and to fit out the indoors, thermally and acoustically, so as to provide service to the new uses. This process had been followed before in some other warehouses of the slaughterhouse and, as a result, mountains of tile, timber, cladding and granite slab rubble piled up waiting to be taken to the dump.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

I prefer to think that this project emerged from opportunity, from discovering an opportunity in that rubble. In the path of exploring all the reasonable possibilities, the construction system turns into a project generator, in the place where a certain ethic view on rehabilitation rests, before architecture.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

How does that found object work? How does the flat shingle tile work? How is it stacked? How is it bonded? What are its organoleptic characteristics, its weight? How do they join? These are some of the questions that arise during the process. The absence of some bonding elements produce lattices, the passing of light. Sometimes a whole piece for the walls, others, half a piece for the claddings. The problem of the corners, the lintels. The universal problems that architecture faces arise. At the same time and with the same intensity the workforce and imperfection appear. The imperfection of man and the old, the recovered. I recall a naïve order given on the building site: “Twist yourself José, it doesn’t matter” and an answer, a lecture from the site manager: “I won’t twist! There will always be time for that!” A job of many, full of vibrations. The vibrations of the collective craftsmen, the craftsman that Richard Sennett claims.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

Like that cottage in the woods by the Swedish architect Ralph Erskine, where he piled trunks to protect himself from the harshness of winter, this project is also bioclimatic. It is bioclimatic because the tile contributes to the thermal and acoustic comfort and it’s sustainable because it reinvents itself with what it has within range. It is bioclimatic like architecture of a small country village, like those hearth-chimneys lined with clay that can be found in the province of Soria.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

It’s an intervention that intends to respect a valid spatial configuration, without adulterating it. It is proof of the power of architecture as a qualified container, independent from its uses, of the circumstantial uses. It’s a classic concept, everlasting in space, which has nothing to do with classicism, nor necessarily with Italy. Against the intended traditional “national” style that Luis Bellido applied to façades, in this case, on the inside, the style is diluted, it ceases to be heir of the old Madrid School. Order, opportunity, engagement, contention or clarity without any previous formal will. An unknown field to me, beyond the project, beyond any intention. The architect’s prominence takes a step back, it abandons architecture in time. History is pendular and helical, if we assume it has three dimensions.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

This project undoes some paths already travelled, it intends to reach meeting points. It advances by retreating, like rowers, that are looking backwards, like Oteiza explained. From the Spanish tile, which was designed using a woman’s thigh as a mould, and from its manual laying, take over came about by industrialized application and its flat (tile) version. Now, the industrialized elements, lifeless, are understood in another way, de-contextualized and laid from the predictability of manual labour. This project tries to understand architecture as an intellectual, cultural and ethical experience. Not to be mistaken with a social or political stance.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

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Location: C/ PASEO DE LA CHOPERA, 14. NAVE 8B. ANTIGUO MATADERO LEGAZPI. 28045 MADRID.
Preparation of the project and completion of construction schedule: January 2009-December 2009.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

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Project’s authorship: Arturo Franco. (architect)
Project’s collaborators: Diego Castellanos. (interior architect), Yolanda Ferrero. (architect)
Site Supervisor and Quantity Surveyor: Jose H. Largo Díaz. DITE SL.
Developer/Owner: Arts Council of Madrid City Council
Construction Company: PECSA.s.a.

Warehouse 8B by Arturo Franco Office for Architecture

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Period for completion: 8 months
Work budget: 500.000 €.
Intervention area: 1.000 sq m


See also:

.

Casa Paz by Arturo
Franco Office
Pallet House
by I-Beam
Slowpoke Cafe
by Sasufi