Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron’s Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

News: construction is underway on an outdoor bathing lake in Riehen, Switzerland, by Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron.

Naturbad Riehen will be filled with natural water without chlorine or chemical additives and is designed to accommodate 2000 bathers per day. As well as the pool for bathers, the Naturbad will incorporate a series of biological water treatment basins embedded in a sloping field on the other side of the road.

Herzog & de Meuron originally won a competition to design a municipal pool for Riehen in 1979, but the scheme was shelved in 1982. The Swiss architects were then commissioned to rethink the concept in 2007, when they abandoned the conventional swimming pool concept in favour of a facility using natural filtration.

The pool is expected to be completed in 2014.

Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Last month Herzog & de Meuron was among 12 international firms shortlisted to design a new headquarters for the Nobel Prize in Stockholm, Sweden, while earlier this year they completed three halls for the Messe Basel exhibition centre – see all architecture by Herzog & de Meuron.

Last year we featured a proposal for a skyscraper in Peru with vertiginous swimming pools sticking out of every apartment and a concept for a pool under an inverted dome at an Istanbul primary school – see all swimming pools.

Work starts on Herzog and de Meuron's Naturbad Riehen swimming pool

Above: site plan

Images by Herzog & de Meuron.

The post Work starts on Herzog & de Meuron’s
Naturbad Riehen swimming pool
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Leisure Society – Fight for Everyone

Le studio anglais Persistent Peril a réalisé ce petit bijou d’animation pour illustrer le morceau « Flight For Everyone » du groupe The Leisure Society. Colorée et très drôle, ce clip propose de découvrir la création d’une planète par une main géante, son évolution et ses effets indésirables de la vie sur celle-ci.

Fight for Everyone7
Fight for Everyone5
Fight for Everyone4
Fight for Everyone2
Fight for Everyone
Fight for Everyone3
Fight for Everyone6

Zoological Park of St Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Paris landscape designers TN Plus and architects Beckmann N’Thépe have won a competition to design a zoological park on a series of artificial islands for the outskirts of St Petersburg.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Spread across 300 hectares, the park will replace the historic but cramped city-centre zoo.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

The site will be arranged to loosely reflect the layout of the Earth’s continents when they first began to separate.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Different species of animals will be located in their native zones within this diagram.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Construction is scheduled for completion in 2014.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Click above for larger image

More stories about zoos on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


New Saint Petersburg Zoo
Primorskiy’s Zoological Parc

Landscape designers: TN Plus / Architects: Beckmann N’Thépe

Bruno Tanant et Jean Christophe Nani – Landscape designers TN Plus, Aldric Beckmann et Françoise N’Thépé – Architects Beckmann N’Thépé, win the international compétition for the completion of the Primorskiy’s new zoological Park, Saint-Petersburg (Russia).

Founded in 1865 Saint-Petersburg zoo is the oldest zoological park of Russia. As most of other parks across Russia, it suffers today from a cruel lack of space, being located in the heart of the historical town center. The city has hence decided to create a new zoo, which will range over 300 hectares, on the town’s outskirts, escaping this way the high population density of the urban area. The project preserves a large strech of land, and implements an environmentally beneficial approach.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Click above for larger image

Concept

Thousands and thousands of years ago, the surface of the earth was but one and only supercontinent, known as the Pangea. Subject to tectonic forces, the Paleolithic Pangea over time broke into splinters, which slowly organised themselves in a configuration that, although always prone to movements, we still are familiar with. Ecosystems, once linked with each others, are today kept apart by oceans and seas. Species of the same origin have followed a distinct path on each separated continent.

The project offers a symbolic sample of every continent in an attempt to recreate the illusion of a reunited Pangea within the very zoological park of Saint-Petersburg. The archipelago therefore created will be made of islands representing South East Asia, Africa, Australia, South America, North America and Eurasia, the two latter being linked with each other by the pack ice of the Arctic Pole. The chosen site enjoys a profuse water supply, and hence is particularly fitted for such an insular organization of the various environments.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg by TN Plus and Beckmann N’Thépé

Click above for larger image

Project

Nowadays the environment requirements and the green consciousness of the public are increasingly considered a core issue. The very background of a zoological park itself induces a mandatory respect of those values. Harshly criticized for a long time, zoological parks are today considered major stakeholders of biodiversty preservation. Even though it is an artificially recreated leisure area, the Primorskiy Park is above all an educational tool allowing each and everyone of us to better grasp our own history, and also a research center helping to preserve our Earth. So much goals were aimed both by architects and landscape designers of this project who managed to convince and share their ambitions.

Zoological Park of Saint-Petersburg
Expected time of complétion: 2014
Surface : 96 ha on a total area of 300 ha
3474 animals ( 479 species)


See also:

.

Korkeasaari Zoo by TN+
and Beckmann-N’Thépé
Aviary by Group8 with
Guscetti & Tournier
Elephant House by
Foster + Partners

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

This former bullring in Barcelona has been converted into a leisure complex by architects Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners, retaining the original facade.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The reopened building, now named Las Arenas, has been given a 76m wide domed roof that is braced to the original structure, providing roof terraces overlooking the city.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The plinth that the historic building sat upon has also been demolished, creating new entrances directly from the street rather than via ramps and staircases.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

This has enabled two new access routes to be created through the building, as well as plazas around the perimeter, improving connectivity with the nearby park and metro station.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Removal of the plinth revealed a previously buried part of the original facade, where two storeys of shops and restaurants have been inserted under new supporting columns.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The building also provides a central event space, a cinema, a gym and offices.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

More stories about Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners on Dezeen »

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

More projects in Barcelona on Dezeen »

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Below is a detailed project description from RSH+P:


Las Arenas, Barcelona, Spain 2000—2011
Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners was originally appointed by Barcelona-based developer Sacresa to redevelop an existing bullring in the city of Barcelona into a major new mixed-use leisure and entertainment complex. The scheme was subsequently taken over by Metrovacesa and was formally opened to the public in March 2011.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Las Arenas is strategically located at the foothill of Montjuic at the intersection of Gran Via and Avenue Paral∙lel, two major city highways, and acts as a major landmark for the Plaça d’Espanya transport interchange.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The historic bullring, constructed at the very end of the 19th century, fell largely into disuse during the 1970s due to the declining popularity of bull fighting in Catalonia. However, the strong civic and cultural role which the building played in the life of Barcelona over nearly a century – not only as a bullring but also as a venue for opera and theatre productions, rock concerts, political gatherings and even as a barracks during the Civil war – led to a decision by the city council that the façade should not be demolished. As a result, the redevelopment has retained and refurbished the striking neo-mudéjar façade, while creating an open and accessible entrance to the new building at street level. Within the façade of the former bullring, approximately 47,000 m² of mixed activities has been created plus a 1,250-space car park in the basement. The main activities offered are commercial, entertainment, health and leisure spaces focused around a central event space, including multiplex cinemas on the third floor and a gym and the ‘Museum of Rock’ on the fourth floor. In addition, a separate building – the ‘Eforum’ – in Carrer de Llançà, adjacent to the bullring, will provide retail and restaurants at ground and first-floor levels, with four levels of offices above.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The original 19th century bullring was raised above the levels of the surrounding streets with ramps and stairs within the surrounding plinth providing access. However, the redevelopment – which involved the excavation of the base of the façade and the insertion of composite arches to support the existing wall and create new spaces for shops and restaurants – establishes a new, open public realm around the building providing level access to a wide range of retail facilities. In contrast, the Eforum building follows the typical, historic street alignment of the Pla Cerda grid pattern of streets which are typical of the 19th century Barcelona streetscape.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

The approach for the bullring uses the most advanced architectural and engineering technologies in response to the brief, while respecting and celebrating the fabric of the historical bullring to re-establish the building as a visually striking landmark for the city. The most spectacular aspect of the intervention is the inclusion of a 100-metrediameter habitable ‘dish’ with a 76-metrediameter domed roof, floating over the façade – and structurally independent from it – providing flexible, column-free spaces beneath the dome (as well as below on level 4). This ‘plaza in the sky’ incorporates large terraces around the perimeter with space for cafés and restaurants, providing stunning views across the city.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Two main access routes cut through the building at 180-degrees to each other, providing access from Gran Via and Parc Joan Miró as well as Carrer Tarragona and Carrer de Llançà and forming a cruciform system leading into the central atrium space. Within these zones, escalators are located to provide access to all levels including the rooftop plaza. Two large, partially-glazed passenger lifts are located on one side of the circular atrium serving the parking and retail (-1) levels; on the other side of the atrium, two fully-glazed, panoramic passenger lifts serve the upper floors.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

In addition, there are two fully-glazed external lifts on Carrer de Llançà at the entrance to the Eforum office building and two panoramic passenger lifts (partially glazed) on the outside of the telecommunications tower facing Plaça d’Espanya. This tower reinforces the presence of the bullring and – at its base – provides direct access from the metro station Espanya to the building. The multifunctional area within the dome and the restaurants around its perimeter can be accessed from this elevated public space.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Equally important is the resolution of the ground plane surrounding the bullring, where new plazas are created to provide connections with the existing metro station and neighbouring Parc Joan Miró. In addition, the development links strongly to the nearby Fira de Barcelona – a key European business exhibition venue attracting 3.5 million visitors annually – and the neighbouring districts of Eixample and Sants-Montjuic, one of Barcelona’s fastest growing and most dynamic areas.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

The roof and the giant dish are supported on huge pylons, with services and circulation, such as escalators and stairways, accommodated in the cruciform-shaped zone, defined by the four raked pylon structures.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

The design is based on a series of separate and complementary structural systems which allows a variety of activities and user requirements to take place on different levels inside the building. The dish supports the cupola/dome, creating an open and flexible space. Its columns travel down to ground level within the four atria; bridges, lifts, escalators and walkways either pass through these columns or on either side of them. This also allows for an open, columnfree space at level 4 and removes the need for any structural members to pass through the cinema spaces below at levels 2 and 3. These cinema spaces are formed by large steel cantilevered boxes that effectively constitute a separate, self-contained structural system within the building and rest on a concrete base at level 2.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

From level 2 downwards, a more conventional concrete column and floor slab construction has been used for the retail areas. The design of the column layout has provided the spaces required by the client for different retail zones; these columns continue into the four levels of car park below, creating a logical layout for vehicle access and parking.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

Additional, separate structural systems support the existing façade of the historic bullring (providing maintenance, fire escape, services and access gantries) and the adjacent Eforum, which connects with the retail at ground level and also with the car park and basement ramps. Between the bullring façade and the Eforum is a services spine and large goods lifts, with other services for the bullring complex placed on the roof of the Eforum.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

The roof dome is finished with a plastic coating which helps to reduce glare from reflected sunlight. The relatively shallow dome rises only ten metres from its perimeter to the centre. While this geometry is structurally challenging, with its susceptibility to buckling and large deflections, the dimensions were nonnegotiable, having to keep within an envelope agreed during the initial planning consent. The maximum crown height was
fixed to reduce the visual impact of the roof from a nearby historic fountain.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

Several structural options were researched for the roof with the preferred solution being a lamella structure in which the timber members form a pattern of lozenges creating a grid-shell of timber. This works by having simple, repetitive short lengths of timber glu-lam beams, made of fir and joined together to form the dome. The pattern changes at the crown where the structure terminates in a circular ring beam, defining a 30 metre-diameter oculus constructed from a simplified pattern of glu-lam members. The primary members of the dome are connected invisibly. As a result, even though they are bolted together, all of the metal is hidden within the wood so that observers beneath the dome will perceive only a continuous timber structure. The laminated beams are topped with two layers of plywood – ‘Kerto’ panels which aid structural stiffness – and a layer of insulation, topped with a seamless liquid application roofing system for a weather-proof finish. The entire roof sits on a three-metre-high ‘skirt’ to overcome the possibility of unusable low space at the perimeter of the dome. The skirt is comprised of 20 boomerang-shaped columns supporting the dome’s perimeter beam. Inclined struts spring from these columns to directly support the ring beam where it meets the timber grid-shell, while providing stability to the entire structure. This approach not only provides a visual contrast with the steel used to construct the dish, but has the environmental advantage of being a sustainable and renewable natural resource. The choice of timber also meant that the structure could be exposed to dramatic visual effect, as fire performance is achieved by sacrificing charring layers.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

All the constituent parts – the façade, the roof-level spaces, the four internal segments and the adjacent Eforum – are structurally independent, allowing for future flexibility and change to encourage a wide variety and rotation of activities, including sports events, fashion shows and exhibitions.

Las Arenas by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners

Click above for larger image

Location: Barcelona, Spain
Use: Cultural & Leisure
Dates: 2000-2011
Areas: Gross internal area – 105,816m², Bullring – 46,973m², Eforum – 5,500m², Parking – 53,343m²
Number of floors (above ground): 5
Client: Metrovacesa (originally Sacresa)
Architect: Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partners
Co-architect: Alonso Balaguer y Arquitectos Asociados
Structural engineers: Expedition Engineering and BOMA
Services engineers: BDSP and JG
Quantity surveyor: TG3
Acoustic consultants: BDSP and Audioscan
Existing façade consultants: Expedition Engineering and BOMA
Project & construction manager: Bovis
Main contractor: Dragados
Roofing contractor: Finnforest
Services contractors: MTECH and EMTE
Steel contractor (for dish): Martifer
Building façades contractor: Joan Obré
Office façades contractor: Strunor


See also:

.

Cultural and Leisure Center
by Philippe Starck
House of Culture and
Movement
Bodegas Protos winery
by RSH+P

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

This pavilion with illuminated eaves was designed by Dutch firm MoederscheimMoonen Architects for two football teams in Rotterdam.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

The sports pavilion forms part of Park 16Hoven, a new residential suburb of the city.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

The two-storey building has dressing rooms and storage on the ground floor covered by turf mounds, which slope down to meet the pitch surface on the northern side.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

The clubhouse and boardrooms on the upper storey overlook the pitches, with the grassy slopes forming a natural grandstand.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

The roof extends on all sides and is illuminated at night by LEDs.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

All photographs are by Rob ‘t Hart.

Here’s some more from the designers:


Sports-pavilion in Rotterdam by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

MoederscheimMoonen Architects recently delivered a new sports-pavilion for two soccer clubs in Rotterdam, The Netherlands. The project is part of the development of Park 16Hoven; a large new suburban neighborhood adjacent to the city center and the airport.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

Within the open space between the airport and newly developed houses in the park, the aim for the design was to create a transparent and ‘lightweight’ pavilion.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

The building is set up in two levels. The clubhouses and the boardrooms are situated on the top floor of the building. This level is directly connected to the pitches by grass-covered slopes.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

These slopes cover the ground floor with its dressing rooms and storage areas, and provide a natural grandstand for spectators.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

The final piece of the building is the translucent cantilevered roof. This roof filters direct sunlight and illuminates like a lampoon in the evening thanks to the integration of LED powered lighting.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

Click above for larger image

The building is iconic in its direct environment due to the continuous outline of the building and the illuminated roof.

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

Click above for larger image

Architect: MoederscheimMoonen Architects
Location: Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Project Architect: Erik Moederscheim
Project Team: Erik Moederscheim, Ruud Moonen, Jelle Rinsema
Engineering: Bureau Bouwkunde

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

Click above for larger image

Structural Engineering: IBT Bouwtechniek
General Contractor: Batenburg BV
Client: Municipality of Rotterdam
Gross floor space: 1410 sqm
Photography: Rob ‘t Hart

Sports Pavillion by MoederscheimMoonen Architects

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Training centre
by Chartier-Corbasson
Green Point Stadium
by GMP Architekten
More
architecture stories