Grimshaw unveils “world’s largest airport terminal under one roof” for Istanbul

News: a design team led by London firm Grimshaw has revealed plans for a new six-runway airport in Istanbul capable of accommodating up to 150 million passengers a year.

Istanbul Airport by Grimshaw, Nordic and Haptic

The Grimshaw-led team, which also includes Norwegian firm Nordic Office of Architecture and London studio Haptic, says the Istanbul New Airport Terminal One will become the “world’s largest airport terminal under one roof”, covering a site of nearly 100 hectares.

Described by the designers as “modern and highly functional, with a unique sense of place”, the terminal will feature a vaulted canopy dotted with skylights. These will focus daylight onto key sections of the interior, including check-in desks, passport control and shops.

Istanbul Airport by Grimshaw, Nordic and Haptic

The airport will be located 20 miles outside the city on the Black Sea coast. It will be built in four phases, with the first expected to open in 2018 and serve up to 90 million passengers a year.

A large plaza and transport hub will be built at the entrance, allowing the airport to integrate with existing rail, metro and bus routes.

Istanbul Airport by Grimshaw, Nordic and Haptic

Grimshaw recently completed an airport in St Petersburg with golden ceilings, designed to reference the gilded spires of the Russian city’s churches. But partner Andrew Thomas says this new project will aim to capture “design worthy of the world city of Istanbul”.

“The Istanbul airport attempts to reconcile the requirements for a top modern, functional airport with something that is rooted in local identity,” added Haptic director Tomas Stokke.

“We were inspired by the local use of colours and patterns, the quality of light and how it penetrates buildings, as well as by traditional architecture such as the Süleymaniye Mosque.”

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Wooden Istanbul house converted into a new office for Turkish tinned tuna company

Movie: in our final exclusive interview from Inside Festival, Emre Açar of Alatas Architecture & Consulting explains how the Turkish studio converted a dark, narrow nineteenth-century house in Istanbul into a light office space.

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

Dardanel Administration Building by Alatas Architecture & Consulting, which won the creative re-use category at last month’s Inside Festival, provides office space for Turkish tinned tuna company Dardanel‘s 25-person administrative team.

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

The building required significant structural reinforcement to make it earthquake-resistant, but Açar says the key to the success of the project was getting enough daylight inside it.

“The [original] windows were so small and the central parts [of the building] were completely dark because of these small windows,” he explains. “We needed to find some solutions to create lighter spaces.”

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

Alatas Architecture & Consulting chose to preserve the nineteenth-century wooden front of the house, but added a second set of glass doors to the entrance to allow light into the building while keeping the elements out.

“The main entrance doors, these historical wooden doors, are always open,” Açar says. “We have [added] two double glass doors to give us some connection from [to outside to] the interior .”

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

The back of the building was altered much more dramatically, with the addition of floor-to-ceiling windows and a glass-roofed extension, which houses the main meeting room. Glass panels in the floor of this room in turn allow daylight to pass into the server room below.

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

“We made the top part of the building completely from glass,” Açar says. “With this glass roof we tried to provide lighter spaces inside.”

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

The architects also added a completely new spiral staircase and elevator shaft made of glass through the middle of the building, which dissipates light from a skylight above it.

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

To make the building feel less narrow, Alatas Architecture & Consulting added mirrors to the bright white interior walls.

“The building’s width is just 5 metres,” Açar says. “It was like a tunnel. We wanted to make [the building seem] like it continues on the other side, so we used reflective materials. The workers feel like they are in a bigger building.”

Dardanel Administration Building in Istanbul, Turkey, by Alatas Architecture & Consulting

This movie was filmed at Inside Festival 2013, which took place at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore from 2 to 4 October. The next Inside Festival will take place at the same venue from 1 to 3 October 2014. Award entries are open February to June 2014.

Emre Acar of Alatas Architecture and Consulting
Emre Acar of Alatas Architecture and Consulting. Copyright: Dezeen

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Link About It: This Week’s Picks : Istanbul in photos, the Serpentine’s new cloud, Cape Town’s hailstorm and more in our weekly look at the web

Link About It: This Week's Picks


1. Tom Ford’s Western When he’s not changing the face of fashion for brands like Gucci and YSL, the iconic Tom Ford spends roughly a quarter of his year on a 24,000-acre New Mexico ranch. The…

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JDS Architects reveals green office complex for Istanbul

News: JDS Architects has unveiled plans for an M-shaped office building with green terraces in the north of Turkey’s largest city.

Called Premier Campus Office, the building will be located in the Kagithane district of Istanbul.

JDS Architects reveals green office complex for Istanbul

Julien De Smedt Architects has proposed a gently curving M-shaped plan topped with several levels of green terraces.

As well as offices, the building will offer shops and leisure activities on its ground floor.

JDS Architects reveals green office complex for Istanbul

“We’ve thought of a building where inside interacts with outside, where the plan is flexible to allow for anyone to find its desired space and place, whether it be a small one man show company or a large corporate office employing hundreds,” the architects said.

The firm, which is based in Oslo, Copenhagen and Brussels, was selected from a shortlist that includes Dutch firm UNStudio and Italian architect Massimiliano Fuksas.

JDS Architects reveals green office complex for Istanbul

Construction on the building will begin in June.

The firm’s previous work includes a Danish housing development modelled on a cluster of icebergs and Holmenkollen ski jump in Oslo, Norway – see all architecture and design by JDS Architects.

JDS Architects reveals green office complex for Istanbul

Other projects in Turkey we’ve featured lately include an apartment building covered in timber louvres and shutters and plans for a museum at the site of the ancient city of Troy.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


The Premier Campus Office in Kagithane is a business district that focuses on the users working and living qualities and addresses its presence in Istanbul as a new form of contextual and urban approach: The building is formed by our desire to make it interact with its environment. It opens itself up to the neighbourhood and offers spaces to the users and the passers by such as plazas, intimate gardens and generous terraces.

The volume of the block is literally carved out to invite the surroundings in. The local hilly landscape, characteristic to Istanbul, is continued in the meandering of the volume both in plan, adapting to the site’s edges, and in section, weaving into itself in a series of gentle curving slopes, echoing the nearby Bosphorus waves. The vibrant commercial life of the ground floor burst out onto the plazas and the landscape. Upstairs the offices open out onto the green terraces, populated with lush vegetation, tempering the hot Springs and Summers. The volume reads clearly while still opening itself generously to the city from the far. As one gets closer the interiors become more discreet, protected by louvers that help shade from the sun.

The project acts as a catalyst of business life for a new Istanbul, that promotes contemporary culture, architecture and lifestyle. We’ve thought of a building where inside interacts with outside, where the plan is flexible to allow for anyone to find its desired space and place, whether it be a small one man show company or a large corporate office employing hundreds. We believe life is plural and various entities should coexist and exchange their experiences. The Premier Campus Office is where such a rich diversity can find its place.

Project: Commercial
Size: 100,000 sq m
Location: Istanbul, Turkey
JDS partner in charge: Julien De Smedt
Client: Feryapi
Team: DB Architects, Tavusbay-STATIK, Geodinamik, Dinamik Proje, Pozitif Proje
Project leader: Kamile Malinauskaite
Type: Invited competition
Status: Ongoing

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office complex for Istanbul
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Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Timber louvres and shutters form a protective shell across the exterior of this apartment building in Istanbul by Turkish studio Alataş Architecture & Consulting.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Screening the upper levels of a glazed curtain wall, the timber cladding cloaks the facade of the six-storey-high Ipera 25 housing block, creating a system of solar shading for the nine apartments contained inside.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Alataş Architecture & Consulting divided the wall into four long vertical strips, which project forward and backwards at different points to allow slices of glass to emerge from between each of the timber panels.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

“The fractures and surface variations on the facade – wider than the architectural structures in the area – not only emerge as a contemporary interpretation of the bay windows of the surrounding buildings, but also allow the facade to be perceived in a more fragmented and ergonomic manner,” architect Ahmet Alataş told Dezeen.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Two one-bedroom apartments are contained on each of the first four floors. Living rooms are positioned at the front of every home and residents can open and close different shutters independently.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

“The wooden elements allow a view of the street and create a bay window effect that establishes a link between home life and life on the street,” said Alataş.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

A two-storey penthouse is located on the uppermost floors of the building, beneath an angled ceiling that follows the pitch of the roof.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Other recently completed housing blocks include a building with a pleated facade on the Canary Islands and an apartment block with diagonally stepped floors and ceilings in Japan. See more housing on Dezeen.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Here’s some more explanation from Alataş Architecture & Consulting:


The building is located on Tatarbeyi Sokak, is one of the most virginal and underdeveloped streets of the rapidly transforming Galata District under conservation. Comprised of eight 80-m2 studio flats and one 190-m2 penthouse up for sale, it has a total surface area of 1000 m2.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

The building is a residential project that extends beyond the conventional codes of the already-built environment, yet manages to reproduce these codes, respecting the existing architectural fabric.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

In this regard, it continues to find new solutions to the existing problems of architecture by utilizing contemporary technologies and taking into consideration the newly burgeoning socio-economic structure of the region, as well as the infrastructure, environmental conditions, climate, and solar movements.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

The building is comprised of a wooden shell that covers the largely transparent living area in an uncompromising manner and set between two blind and extremely thin exposed concrete curtain walls.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

The wooden components on the front elevation run parallel to the glass facade that evolves into a saddle roof and entirely cover the front and back of the building. Perceived as a gigantic blind facade from one perspective, yet appearing as a translucent veil from the other, the wooden surface also functions as a sun filter.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Comprised of parallel horizontal laths that angle at various points, the wooden element divides the facade into four as the middle segments expand outwards, towards the street; leaving the sides exposed, the wooden elements thus allow a view of the street and create a bay window effect that establishes a link between home life and life on the street.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

While the building almost disregards the relationship with the street by refusing to repeat the conventional window spans in the neighborhood, it nonetheless revives its place within the context by reinterpreting the traditional bay window structure on the street.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Behind its impressive presence on the street, the building displays a plain and statuesque appearance that simultaneously blends into and stands out against the context without competing with the neighboring historic buildings in its critical approach.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

As the design is concretized, the concept of the transparent surface of the wooden veil covering the two facades and the roof between two walls is maintained throughout without any qualms. The dilapidated appearance of the neighbouring building at arm’s length is perceived as part of the view and the transparent surface is not even partially compromised.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

While this attitude and the spatial relationship of the interior and the exterior expands the interior volumes of the 80-m2 flats – born out of the new lifestyle needs and culture – towards the facade of the buildings across the street, the translucent nature of the building’s shell allows the street to feel broader and more spacious.

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Architects: Alataş Architecture & Consulting
Location: Galata, İstanbul, Turkey
Design Team: Ahmet Alataş, Emre Açar

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Architectural Group: Özge Güngör Ülüğ, Dilan Yüksel, Emir Elmaslar, Gabriella Colacicco
Area: 1,100 sqm
Year: 2011

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Site plan – click for larger image

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Ground floor plan – click for larger image

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

First-third floor plan – click for larger image

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Fourth floor plan – click for larger image

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Fifth floor plan – click for larger image

Ipera 25 by Alataş Architecture & Consulting

Cross-section – click for larger image

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Word of Mouth: Istanbul: Five recommendations to kick off your Turkish sojourn

Word of Mouth: Istanbul

Though the Istanbul Design Biennial has come and gone, left in the wake is a metropolis refreshed by its burgeoning design community. The city of contrast may be known for traditionalism, but a growing international community is changing all of that, building a progressive urban culture alongside Byzantine ruins….

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Istanbul Design Biennial Highlights: Our favorite picks from Istanbul’s first ever design Biennial

Istanbul Design Biennial Highlights

Istanbul’s design community has come into its own as a powerful international voice. As a testament to their rightful place in the international creative community, the city’s Foundation for Culture and Arts hosted the city’s first-ever Istanbul Design Biennial bringing together Turkish and international artists in a multidisciplinary showcase. Separated…

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Unfold: Mobile workstations and 3D porcelain printing from Belgium to Istanbul

Unfold

Founded in 2002 by Claire Warnier and Dries Verbruggen, Unfold studio out of Belgium has consistently innovated in the world of 3D printing. From designing mobile printing stations to developing printers for porcelain manufacturing, the team leverages an international community of makers who are dedicated to the growing medium….

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HavvAda

Dror presents a self-sustaining island concept for 300,000 residents off the coast of Istanbul

HavvAda

In the process of digging the Turkish government’s proposed Canal Istanbul project one billion cubic meters of soil stands to be displaced. Turkish developer Mister Serdar Inan commissioned multidisciplinary designer Dror Benshetrit to apply a greater design vision to the overall initiative, and on 29 September 2012 he unveiled…

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Koç Primary School swimming pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture’s proposal for a swimming pool under an inverted dome at a primary school in Istanbul has been shortlisted for an award at this year’s World Architecture Festival, which will take place in Singapore from 3-5 October (+ slideshow).

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The architects proposed to partially embed the swimming pool in a grassy mound, with a reflective roof structure bulging down to meet it.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The grassy roof would blend in with the surrounding landscape while the upper dome’s mirrored underside would reflect the greenery.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Three pools were proposed for inside the dome, while a star-shaped outdoor pool would also be placed alongside the main building.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The pool was intended to provide a striking entrance to the campus of Koç Primary School, which is run by the Vehbi Koç Foundatıon.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

The swimming pool has been shortlisted for WAF’s World Building of the Year Award but it will not now be built due to the school’s budget constraints.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Here’s some more text from the architects:


Considerably distant from the city centre, the Koç School sprawled across its property without a master plan over time and thus was faced with the consequences of this expansion. Envisaged as the focal point of the campus, the pool building is designed as a pacesetter for the quality of future buildings and thus strives to contribute towards the architectural development of the campus.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Click above for larger image

As the first building to be perceived from the new entrance axis of the campus, the building also neighbors the existing outdoor sports areas. In order not to compete with the surrounding buildings in terms of height, the pool building is partly embedded in the ground and is connected to the landscape on all four sides with a green, sloped roof. While the inverted dome attached to the dome structure offers a green tribune area to the outdoor sports areas, it is simultaneously perceived as an art object that strengthens the landscape with its reflective exterior.

Vehbi Koç Foundation Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool by Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture

Click above for larger image

The design is distinct from the neighboring buildings particularly due to its strong expression. It has been conceived as the first building/object to be perceived upon entering the campus through the new junction at the school’s highway entrance, thus bringing an added value to the overall appearance of the campus.

Project Title: Vehbi Koç Foundatıon Koç Primary School Campus Indoor Swimming Pool
Client: Vehbi Koç Vakfı
Designers: Ecarch with IND [Inter.National.Design] Hasan Çalışlar, Kerem Erginoğlu, Arman Akdoğan, Felix Madrazo, Alvaro Novas, Hans Larsson, Bas van der Horst, Pablo Roquero, Antonio Goya, Miguel Martins
Status: Competition Project / Unbuilt
Location: Tuzla / İstanbul / Turkey
Project Date: 2011

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Erginoglu & Çalışlar Architecture
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