Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Slideshow: our second project this week by Stuttgart architects Werner Sobek Design is a huge cantilevered altar that was temporarily constructed in Freiberg, Germany, for the pope’s visit last year (photographs by Zooey Braun).

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

The 20-metre-long solid canopy sheltered the leader of the Catholic church during an open-air mass, while the supporting structure behind housed a sacristy and other rooms.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Elements of the steel frame were bolted and clamped together rather than welded so that the structure could be easily disassembled.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Some chairs used to furnish the altar were reused from the pope’s previous visit, while any new furniture was relocated to nearby churches after the event.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

See this week’s other story about Werner Sobek here.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

The text below is from the architects:


Altar for the Papal visit 2011 in Freiburg/Germany

On the occasion of his third visit to Germany, Pope Benedict XVI celebrated an open-air Mass on 25th September 2011.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

The Mass was held on a green space at the airfield in Freiburg. As already done for the Papal visit in Munich 2006, Werner Sobek was asked to design a weather protective Altar roof.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

The Altar consisted of a sacristy for the Holy Father and various other adjoining rooms for ministrants, etc.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

A translucent roof floating 15 m above the Altar protected the area against all weather conditions.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Most parts of the construction material could be reused or recycled after the Mass. During the design phase the focus was put on the materials which do not have to be welded or glued. Joints were only made of bolted, rotating, or clamp joints.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

This not only enabled a quick mounting but also served for the quick dismantling and a clear separation of the used materials. Furnishing was also carried out according to reusability.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Most parts of the furniture were made for the Altar for the Papal visit in 2006. Newly designed furniture could be reused in churches.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Click above for larger image

The supporting structure of the Altar was a steel framework covered with laminar wood. The rear wall and the roof were made of a structural steelwork which was covered with fabric panels, each of them sized 3.6 x 2m and made of PVC polyester and especially in the roof area of PTFE-coated glass fibre fabric.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Click above for larger image

The roof construction did not need a special structure even though it cantilevered 20m. It could be solved with a standardized support system usually carried out on temporary bridges.

Papstbühne Freiburg by Werner Sobek

Architects: Werner Sobek, Stuttgart/Germany
Planning time: 2011
Construction time: 2011
Services rendered by Werner Sobek: design and overall planning
Client: Erzbischöflisches Ordinariat Freiburg

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Slideshow: the glazed walls of this pavilion-like house in southern Germany are sandwiched between a roof and plinth that mirror one another (photographs by Zooey Braun).

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Completed by Stuttgart architects Werner Sobek Design, the ground floor of House D10 is raised just above the surrounding lawn, while a basement floor is concealed beneath.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

A large golden door is located in the centre of the living room and slides open to reveal a hidden kitchen.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

The house generates all its own heating and electricity through photovoltaic panels on the roof and a ground-sourced heat pump.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Other German houses we’ve featured include one with a cinema on its roof and one with a chunky timber shell.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Here’s a little more text from Werner Sobek Design:


D10, Ulm/Germany

Located in Biberach an der Riss, Germany, D10 is a single-storey one-family home built in an established residential area.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

A private driveway provides access to the house.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Two parallel shear walls are a distinguishing feature of the building.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Generously designed glazing serves to provide a spatial enclosure.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Protected by an extensively projecting flat roof a generously sized patio encircling the house serves to unite the indoor space with the outdoor space.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Access to the building is also gained via this patio.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

The living areas are located on the ground floor, whilst the ancillary rooms are housed in the basement.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

The building is adjoined on the north side by a double-garage, which can be accessed directly from the basement.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

A stairway in the living room provides access inside the house.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

The energy concept guarantees that all of the energy required to run the building is gained from regenerative sources.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

A geothermal energy system and a highly-efficient heat pump provide the energy required to produce warm water and meet heating and cooling needs.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

The entire surface of the roof is fitted with a photovoltaic system that generates more power on an annual average than the building consumes.

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Architects: Werner Sobek, Stuttgart/Germany
Planning time: 2008 – 2009

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Construction time: 2009 – 2011
Construction budget: not specified

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Services rendered by Werner Sobek: design. object planning, structural engineering, facade planning, building service equipment and optimising energy efficiency
Client: private

Haus D10 by Werner Sobek

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

The subtly different proportions of two concrete gables fronting a bank building in northern Germany create the illusion that one side is fatter than the other.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Strips of glazing outline the outer edge of both gables, so that even though one is taller the two elevations still appear to mirror one another from certain angles.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Berlin studio Stephan Braunfels Architekten designed the four-storey building for financial company Volksbank.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

A glazed rotunda separates the two gabled wings and accommodates the entrance lobby.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

The building’s rear elevation features the same gabled facades as the front, although one projects further than the other to frame an open courtyard.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

You can see a few more unusual banks here, including one with protruding layers of colour.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Photography is by Olaf Mahlstedt.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Here a few more details about the project, plus a description in German:


Design for an financial service center for the Volksbank in Gifhorn
1st Prize in a competition for the realization

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Historische Gebäudetypologie Der Gifhorner Fachwerkhäuser Wird Mit Minimalistischer Formensprache Moderner Architektur Weiterentwickelt

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Die historisch gewachsene Struktur der Gifhorner Altstadt war geprägt durch zumeist schmale, tiefe und daher giebelständige Fachwerkhäuser, zwischen denen kleine Gassen die Verbindung zwischen öffentlichem Stadtraum und privat genutztem Landschaftsraum bildeten.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

In den letzten beiden Jahrhunderten wurden viele dieser sogenannten Ackerbürgerhäuser zu bürgerlichen Stadthäusern mit traufständigen Walmdächern umgeformt.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Der Neubau für die Volksbank in Gifhorn nimmt die Struktur des historischen Stadtgrundrisses mit den ursprünglich giebelständigen und durch schmale Gassen getrennten „Ackerbürgerhäusern“ wieder auf.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Die minimalistische Architektursprache reduziert die historische Gebäudeform jedoch radikal auf seine wesentlichen Elemente Giebel, Dachhaut und Gasse.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Das Gebäudeensemble gliedert sich in zwei Riegel, die im spitzen Winkel aufeinander zulaufen.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Zwischen ihnen öffnet sich eine Gasse, in deren Zentrum sich eine gläserne Rotunde – der „Marktplatz“ der Volksbank befindet.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Die helle und 24h geöffnete Rotunde dient als Gelenk zwischen öffentlichen Stadtraum, Gebäudeinnenraum und privatem Landschaftsraum und verbindet die flexibel teilbaren Geschäftsräume und Büros der beiden Gebäuderiegel miteinander.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Im Kontrast zu den weitgehend geschlossenen – in hervorragendem Sichtbeton gegossenen -Giebelwänden öffnet sich die mit Ton-farbenen Elementen verkleidete Gebäudehülle der dazwischen liegenden Längswände und Dachflächen zum Innenhof hin mit raumhohen Verglasungen – gleich einem Vorhang.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Der spannungsreiche Wechsel des Gefüges verglaster Fassaden und kubischer, geschlossener Baukörper und deren kecke Durchdringung bringt eine dynamische Architektur hervor, die durch die Asymmetrie der gestaffelten Bauglieder in ihrer dramatischen Gestik noch gesteigert wird – ein Kontrapunkt zur eher monotonen Nachkriegsmoderne der Umgebung.

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Location: Steinweg 51, D – 38518 Gifhorn

Volksbank Gifhorn by Stephan Braunfels Architekten

Client: Volksbank eG Braunschweig Wolfsburg
Planning and Construction Period: 2008 – 2010 [LP 1-9 HOAI] GSF / GV: 3,900 m² / 14,000 m³
Construction Costs: 10 million euros

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Two Corten steel pavilions form the mouths to a tunnel of university laboratories inside a former army tank depot in Bremen, Germany.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Completed in 2005 by Hamburg firm Böge Lindner K2 Architekten, the laboratories provide research facilities for students studying behavioural and social sciences at Jacobs University.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

The weathered steel entrance blocks have glazed facades and both contain seating areas where researchers can take a break.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Inside the renovated building, fluorescent tube lights are scattered randomly across a new faceted ceiling that runs along the full length of the main corridor.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

In the past we’ve featured all sorts of research laboratories, ranging from one for nanotechnology to one for chocolatesee them all here.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Photography is by Klaus Frahm, Artur Images.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

The following text is from the architects:


A Transformation of a barrack’s old tank depot into a laboratory

Since the year 2000 a German barracks compound has been gradually transformed into an attractive campus for Jacobs University Bremen, integrating the existing buildings. The theme “structure in a park” dictates the character.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Using these existing qualities, a new architectonic theme is created and with a few substantial changes a unique character for the old and new buildings is developed. Flexible energy concepts have been used while transforming the old building substance.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

The barrack’s old tank depot appears based on its construction to not be suitable to be remodeled to laboratories and offices for humanitarian sciences.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

For reasons of short notice availability and good architectural and financial experiences with other old buildings, it was remodelled to a temporary structure with two entrances for both.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

The entrances grow out of the old building as tunnel like openings that end with a story high, frameless glazing, enclosed by Corten Steel. Through the abrasive materiality the design respects the old depot hall and connects with it.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

The former gate opening was simply closed up with proton masonry, covered by profile glazing. The room’s different depth requirements create a spectacular interior circulation, which is shaped by a folded drywall ceiling and overhead tube lighting.

Laboratory for Behavioural and Social Sciences by Böge Lindner K2 Architekten

Click above for larger image

The Laboratory “Behavioral and Social Sciences” provides over 1900 m2 of research space to research groups in psychological and social sciences. Laboratory rooms are available for:
• computerized testing methods
• interviews
• behavior video observation
• psychophysiological testing (including electrophysiological measurement)
• human performance
• eye tracking
• telephone survey

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcún and Atelier SAD

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

Designer Martin Papcún and Czech architects Atelier SAD want to immerse an upside-down shell of a house into the ground of St. Jakob’s Square in Munich.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

The proposals were drawn up as an entry to a competition organised by the City of Munich for the design of public art installations.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

Envisioned as a memorial, the structure would commemorate all unnamed victims of war or violence in the city, specifically those caught up in conflict they didn’t choose to participate in.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

The empty house would be formed from sand-blasted concrete, with a narrow illuminated gap between the walls and roof.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

The base of the structure would protrude up from the ground just enough to create a parapet that prevents anyone falling in.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

The winners of the competition have yet to be announced.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

We recently counted down the ten most popular memorials that have been on Dezeen – see them here.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

Visualisations are by Michal Nohejl.

Memorial to all victims by Martin Papcun and Atelier SAD

Here’s the full project description from Martin Papcún:


Memorial for all victims “House — Minster”

House as a diary of our being

Every human’s live is an outstanding abandoned indelible mark, whether in a shape of tangibly handled “stories”, or mere imprint in us.

Our being is energy which is self transformed and self fulfilled in to our physical world.

Life of everyone of us has its strong specific way which is influenced and makes influences during effusion.

In any war conflict, totalitarian and violent regime, natural disaster or civil accident there are victims – people who are forced in to circumstances they don’t want and don’t want to participate in; they are thrown in to situation, which doesn’t allow them act freely and make independent decisions.

Often they are unnamed, fought by their own destiny in to “abyss” from which there is no escape and no way to win.

Any one of us assumedly has never heard about them, never met them, but imprint of their lives is lasting, is here and doesn’t disappear.

We could often come across places without visible marks of change, where we feel stigmatisation left by horror, tragedy and pain, and those places are the bearers of memories.

It is about something that is difficult to express through substance but we can feel it from inside and can define it by personal feelings.

Imprints of lives outlived can be recognised in modern day’s matter.

Memorial of all victims is dedicated to the people who were not heroes but they left somewhere their own indelible imprint. We are learning on their destiny how to repair our own mistakes and mistakes of others.

Archetypal building “House — Minster”

House is a universal place of our lives, centre of family, love, work, trust and contemplation, shelter in which we are hiding and it is a space for our eternal sleep.

Our private and social lives are connected with home / house / building – place of living and working. Thus the matter defining place/space is witnessing the passing of our live.

House is not just a building; it’s the point and centre of our home. Our memories, our energy, and our lives are imprinted there.

Everything that happened in our live is transformed inside us and has an influence on surroundings. This impact is denoted and absorbed by space around us.

We can sense this untouchable imprint but we can’t catch it and frame it in words.

Energy goes through the walls, has no borders, no limits. Places, spaces and buildings are stigmatised by us.

Subject of the Memorial

Negative form of archetypal shape of a house is a definitive space determined by the matter around. “Inside” matter is missing, similar to our past caught only by memories.

Shape of the House is defined by side walls and roof made from black/gray matt sand blasted concrete. The House will be turned upside down, turned a bit on two axis and immersed by 4/5 in to the ground. This turned imprint of a building, house and minster – is archetypal place of first and last hide.

It is the place of transcendence, contemplation, recollection and grief.

  • negative imprint in matter, in earth–definition of non material space, the duality of matter
  • symbol of the untouchable past imbedded with vivid memories
  • you can look down, look back, through and behind materialising memory’s essence
  • visual change over from present and material world (over ground) to viewpoint in to “nothing”, to non–touchable (underground)
  • self reflection, a glance inside us in a quiet non–space
  • the turn of the House is a reflection on ephemeral essence of being and clinging to all material

Positioning

Place at St. Jakobs–Square was chosen for its historical context, with Ohel–Jakobs Synagogue and Israelitische Kultur congregation, and also for the architectural quality of surrounding buildings.

The absence of matter in the Memorial is a kind of transcendental dimension inside everyone who would step in the visually overcrowded social space of the Square.

This place is about taking a brake for thought, an opportunity to immerse oneself in to transcendental dark / light space inside of each of us.

The Memorial place is in the centre of the Square, in dialog with surrounding buildings. It does not get in a way of passers– by or residents returning home. It invites you to come over and stay for a while. Graduation of the Memorial’s height allows non–obstructed observation of the surrounding buildings and the turn on two axis creates points of various heights in the composition.
A first time viewer will see space defined by black/grey wall, and undefined matter inside. But the closer view will show negative imprint of hollow house immersed in to the ground.

As the viewer comes closer to the Memorial the depth and the negative imprint inside the house will reveal themselves.

A step nearer to the edge and a glance inside will present full view on the imprinted house and the missing contents.

The Memorial is turned and placed in such a way that its lowest point for viewing is in the direction of the open space of the Square.

Inside the memorial side walls are not touching the roof separated by space between them. This space is in shadow during the day and effulge light at night. The roof seems to be levitating in the underground space as if the minster is floating in another dimension.

Visual disconnection from surrounding space above creates a feeling of calmness. Glance in to the empty space, in to dark is a symbol of a shared journey with the ones we meet.

At night the shadows are changing in to intensive effulge light. It is so intense that a viewer will loose ability to visually comprehend what is inside.

Where is the beginning there is the end. Absorption by darkness is alternated by absorption by light.

The level of the upper part of the House is gradually rising alongside the walls creating natural barrier against accidents.

Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

A painted-timber skin that skirts around the top storey of this Hamburg house reveals the heights of staggered floors inside.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Completed by German architects Kraus Schoenberg in 2007, the two-storey Haus W is nestled into a gently sloping landscape.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

A living room occupies the entire ground floor and is fronted by continuous walls of glazing that face a sunken garden.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

The rooms upstairs, which include bedrooms, bathrooms and a dressing room, are constructed from timber and are arranged at different levels.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

A two-storey-high bookcase is the centrepiece of the house and extends through both floors.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

The building was prefabricated, just like a few others we’ve featured recently on Dezeen – see our special feature here.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Photography is by Ioana Marinescu, apart from where otherwise stated.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Here’s a little more text from Kraus Schoenberg:


Haus W

This is an affordable prefabricated low-energy house for a young couple and their two children. The family wanted a house which felt like a connected space, but which would also offer individual freedom to the occupants.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

The building is separated into an upper and a lower part.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Above: photograph by Kraus Schöenberg

The upper volume consists of rooms of various heights corresponding to their individual function. Bedrooms, bathrooms, the dressing room and the rooms for the children all require different heights and project into the lower living areas. This common space is organised by these staggered volumes without being interrupted by partitions.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Walking around the house takes one through a variety of rooms on the upper level, which are orientated to the garden as well as to the inner atrium. The openness allows the user to combine rooms and functions in various ways.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

The walls and floors of the individual upper rooms are built of sustainable CNC-cut timber panels. These do a variety of things: they constitute the finish; define spaces and functions; help insulate the building; are recyclable; create a comfortable internal environment; and offer a cost-effective building solution.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

The lower ground floor is cut into the ground creating direct views into the garden while standing up, or offering a feeling of security while sitting down. The various heights of the ceiling above indicate the individual rooms of the upper level.

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Type: Single family house
Client: Family W

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Location: Hamburg, Germany
Date: 2006 – 2007
Construction: 4 months

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Area: 130m2
Volume: 600m3
Ceiling heights: 1.88m – 6.30m

Dezeen_Haus W by Kraus Schoenberg

Value: £ 200 000
Heating: Geothermal power
Energy use: 59.8kwh/m2a

House S by Christ Christ

House S

German architects Christ Christ have added box-like rooms and an outdoor cinema to the roof of a house in Wiesbaden.

House S

Named House S, the former bungalow now has three storeys, with a cantilevered roof separating the first floor from the new upper level.

House S

Existing partitions are removed from the first floor to accommodate a large open-plan living room and kitchen, while the master bedroom is relocated to the new second floor.

House S

A glass corridor connects this bedroom to the other two boxes, which contain an extra living room and a home office.

House S

The cinema terrace is located on one of three separate roof gardens and overlooks a private courtyard on the storey below.

House S

A separate apartment is located on the ground floor.

House S

Other popular German residences we’ve featured include a woodland retreat with a chunky timber shell and a house covered in rubber – see more projects from Germany here.

House S

Photography is by Thomas Herrmann.

House S

Here’s some more text from Christ Christ:


House S – extension and conversion

This specific construction assignment is a central topic of today’s urban development: the roof area as building site which can be covered with independent buildings – urban compression by utilization of roof areas as valuable building land.

House S

Thereby the architect is always confronted with the question of how to handle with the existing building in a contemporary sense. In the case of House S a 60´s bungalow, built by interior architect Wilfried Hilger for himself and his family.

House S

Due to space limitations the new owners, a family of four, decided to heightening the existing bungalow and furthermore to renovate the basic structure.

House S

To keep the bungalow’s typical character three single boxes were placed on a cantilevered flat roof, which are connected only by a glass corridor.

House S

The new structure creates zones with different qualities: in the south-west a meadow with a small apple tree, in the north a stone paved courtyard with a pine tree and in the east a roof terrace with a magnolia.

House S

In one of the new boxes the master bedroom, dressing room and bath room is located. The two other boxes function as personal living room and home office for the landlords.

House S

In the first floor nearly all walls and installations were removed, so that a large living room could be created. An open kitchen was placed in the midst of that living area.

House S

This floor additionally includes the children’s rooms with dressing room and bath room.

House S

In the ground floor a guest room and an additional apartment is located.

House S

By the usage of triple glazed windows and highly effective insulation an energetically optimized building could be realized.

House S

Project description House S | Wiesbaden
Client: Private
Design: Roger Christ
Assistants: Ronni Neuber, Julia Url
Structural Engineering: Schmitt + Thielmann und Partner | Wiesbaden
Photographer: Thomas Herrmann | Stuttgart

House S

Materials and surfaces
Walls: facing concrete, oak rough cut, white lacquered wood, profilit glass, dry construction white painted
Ceilings: suspended plsterboard ceiling, white
Floorings: oak parquet (oiled finish), sisal wall to wall carpet
Terrace floor: timber floor
Kitchen: Bulthaup white
Face of the building: superfine plaster, glass, profilit glass, oak rough cut
Sun protection: textile screen white
Building data
Size of the plot: 873 m²
Living space: 452 m²
Start of construction: 06/2010
Completion: 07/2011

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

German designers Reich und Wamser have completed a Cologne store with exposed brick walls and gauzy curtains for fashion brand Esprit.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

The Lighthouse shop is furnished with walnut tables and cabinets that display an assortment of garments and accessories.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Plants and flowers fill a courtyard-like room behind glazing at the centre of the store, which is naturally lit from a large skylight overhead.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

The translucent white curtains conceal a fitting room at the rear of the shop, where lampshades resemble upturned woven baskets.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Another shop we’ve featured recently also has exposed brick interiors – see our earlier story about a skincare store in Tokyo.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Photography is by Peter Janczik and Reich und Wamser.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Here’s some extra text from Reich und Wamser:


Reich and Wamser developed the first lighthouse store for Esprit along the lines ‘back to the origins’.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

The new store, located on lively Ehrenstrasse in Cologne leads the customer back to the time when the label was founded in California.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Authentic brick walls, genuine wood, a wintergarden with big skylights and flowers from the sunshine state create an honest ambiance.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Appropriately to the current marketing campaign with Gisele Bündchen, a warm and laid back atmosphere pervades every detail of the store.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Exquisitely crafted walnut furniture, custom made lighting fixtures, fine fabrics and selected souvernirs make you feel visiting your best friend at her attic home.

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Architecture/Design: Reich und Wamser, Düsseldorf

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Store Construction: Paul Serafini, Iserlohn

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser
Light: mylight-Lichtkonzepte, Lünen

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Click above for larger image

Esprit Lighthouse store by Reich und Wamser

Click above for larger image

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.”

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Circular mirrors, glowing acrylic rods and large yellows discs adorn the ceiling of this canteen for German magazine Der Spiegel (photos by Zooey Braun).

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Designed by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects, the dining room is located on the ground floor of the company’s headquarters in the Hafencity development of southern Hamburg.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Over 4000 of the satin-polished aluminium panels cover the ceiling, concealing electrical wiring and fittings behind.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Round lamps hang like upside-down mushrooms above each table and can be individually brightened or dimmed by diners.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The suspended acrylic rods are arranged into curved rows to separate clusters of tables and are illuminated from above.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Painted blacks lines indent the white terrazzo floor to define walkways and discourage encroaching chairs.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Hafencity is a large development beside Hamburg’s Elbe River – other recent projects in the area include a concert hall by Herzog & de Meuron and a curvy apartment block.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Here’s some more information from the architects:


In October 2011 the SPIEGEL Group, whose stable includes Germany’s most important news magazine Der SPIEGEL, moved into its new publishing house in Hamburg’s HafenCity development. This impressive structure on the Eriscusspitze, lapped by the waters of the River Elbe, was designed by Danish architect Henning Larsen.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Ippolito Fleitz Group was commissioned to create a new employees’ canteen for the building. The legacy building’s famous canteen was designed in 1969 by Verner Panton and has since been placed under heritage protection. This inheritance represented a particular challenge.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Verner Panton’s canteen

Our deliberations began with a question: could we integrate Verner Panton’s iconic facility into a new concept? After careful consideration we decided against adopting the facility. One factor which spoke against redeployment was the polygonal format of the new building, where Panton’s square-based modular concept would inevitably lead to virtually uncontrollable spatial remnants.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Furthermore, the new building offers little in the way of large, continuous walls which are crucial to the Panton concept. The old building had three separate, compact spaces which Panton enlivened with the dynamic forms and colours of his ceiling topography. The new space, however, covers a large area and gives a strong horizontal impression. But above all it seemed logical to us to complement the new architecture of the building with contemporary, future-oriented interior design – exactly what Panton’s facility once was for the previous building.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Starting point

The employees’ canteen was and is a calling card of the SPIEGEL Group, reflecting its journalistic philosophy as much as its culture of dialogue – not least because of its prominent position in the building and its high visibility from the exterior. Nonetheless it is a space which looks inward, only accessible to SPIEGEL employees and their guests.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

That means it isn’t a “brand space” as such. The starting point for our deliberations was the characteristics of the space and of the building. The building distinguishes itself through its exposed position on the water and its modern architecture, expressed in the vertical interior space of the 14-storey atrium. The floor plan of the canteen defines a large, polygonal space whose strong horizontal emphasis is further highlighted by the uninterrupted row of windows on two sides.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Ceiling and light

Because the space had to be flexible, it was soon clear that the ceiling design would be the distinguishing moment of the canteen. Reflecting both this fact and the harbour location, we developed a matt shimmering ceiling which reflects light in much the same manner as water. It is formed of 4,230 circles made of micro-perforated satin-polished aluminium, laminated onto noise-absorbing supporting material and set at slight angles to each other. This means that the canteen’s natural light ambience reacts to its surroundings.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

During the day the ceiling is enlivened by water and light effects from the surrounding area. The matt shimmering “plates” absorb daylight and turn the roof into a lively, gently reflective complement to the water surface of the Ericusgraben canal. Large-scale light dishes use intense colour to divide the space into zones. This colour generates a positive atmosphere in the space, even on grey days. Dimmable lamps suspended directly above tables ensure that light levels are infinitely variable.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

In the evening the dishes are transformed into indirectly-lit light objects. The overall mood in the canteen is determined by the warm, white “ambient light” shed by the suspended lamps. Indirect light in selected suspended lamps discreetly illuminates the ceiling discs.Focussed downlights, hidden in the ceiling, complement the nuanced sophistication of the overall mood with light accents.Wallwashers integrated into the ceiling cast an even light on wall surfaces. They create a balance between horizontal and vertical illumination and optimise the sense of space by night, partly through reflections in glass surfaces.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The ceiling also has functional advantages: the area above the ceiling plates is painted black, along with the mandatory technical fittings, rendering them invisible. Ceiling diffusers and sprinklers effectively disappear. In addition, the upper ceiling was configured to be noise-absorbent, complementing the acoustic properties of the micro-perforated plates.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The space and its divisions

Despite the size of the space the visitor should never have an impression of monotonous, interchangeable, production-line construction. Rather the goal is to illustrate, in a dining context, the culture of dialogue which has flourished over the decades at SPIEGEL.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The employees’ canteen is a meeting place, a place of culture and informal exchange of opinions. At the same time it should fulfil functional obligations such as accessibility and spatial clarity.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The round, communicative tables are made from black coated steel frames which seem to grow from the floor in a graceful motion. Granite plates serve as table tops, their lasered surfaces working with the ceiling lights to create glare-free, brilliant light. The tables are placed within the space in three large groups in loose arrangements and so provide an organic counterpoint to the polygonal floor plan. Movement zones are thus clearly delineated.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Three lines are set into the smooth, white terrazzo floor: they ensure tables don’t encroach on walkways. Along these lines four areas are arranged with removable, lightweight spatial filters composed of white, hanging rods. Large yellow light dishes support the zoning of the space just as the hanging lamps locate tables within the space.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Wood panelling lends a sense of depth to structural hubs. The whitewashed, varnished surfaces appear even deeper thanks to a vertical, wavy relief which gives a textile-like effect.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

Through a zigzagging glass façade a separate area can be formed at one end for discrete events or for use of the canteen late at night. A shoal of bright, hanging Plexiglas rods creates glare-free illumination and an intimate setting. The glass façade between this area and the canteen is formed of doubly reflective glass. So at times when both areas are in use, the separation is almost immaterial. However when the canteen is closed and thus darker, the façade appears half-mirrored, half-transparent.

Spiegel Kantine by Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects

The employees’ canteen in the SPIEGEL Group’s new headquarters is a space that meets all functional demands while creating a strong visual impact to form a truly distinguishing space. In so doing it supports the mature culture of communication within the company and in a grand gesture transmits these values to the outside world.