Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

These photographs by Roland Halbe show a mixed-use building by German architects NPS Tchoban Voss, which cantilevers over a neighbouring rooftop in Berlin.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

The five-storey building is clad in metal panels and contains a ground-floor gallery, two floors of offices and a split-level apartment.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

The new block completes the Hamburger Hof complex, for which the architects also renovated and extended surrounding buildings.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

Extensions to existing buildings are also finished in metal panels.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

The group of buildings surround a courtyard that previously housed a carpenter’s workshop.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

More stories about cantilevering buildings on Dezeen »

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

Here is some more information from the architects:


Große Hamburger Street
addition for a court as listed monument

The Hamburger Hof complex presents itself today as a terrain genuinely grown and constantly re-combined by means of residential and commercial buildings over the last 200 year.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

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First documented in 1828, the front building was complemented over and over by additions on the courtyard side, establishing both small trade businesses as well as places of entertainment such as a bowling house.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

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A bronze casting house, a coffee roastery, a brewery, locksmith and carpentry workshops, and various restaurants and bars were located here during the last two centuries, an addition to residential and small office units.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

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The client was fond of the idea to continue this mix of crafts, culture and housing when he acquired the property with the heterogeneous existing development in 2006. In close collaboration with the alert preservation authorities a renovation and expansion concept was developed solely removing two small sheds from the 1960′s.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

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Generously glazed attics were sensibly added, partly resuming again the droop volume of the roofs that had been destroyed during World War II.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

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The only completely new building within the ensemble is a five-story construction abutting an existing fire wall.  On the top floor it protrudes widely into the retral adjacent park, while at the corner of the neighboring brick house shifting onto the old coffee roastery in respectful distance.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

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New fenestrations on the upper floors of the complex offer spectacular views onto this “pocket park” and the surrounding houses, while the historic courtyard is recast by the new layout explicitly implementing modern materials and shapes and yet retaining its vintage character as a semi-private space.

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss

Location: Berlin
Builder: Schauder & Shani GmbH
Completion year: 2010

Hamburger Hof by NPS Tchoban Voss


See also:

.

Casa Paz by Arturo
Franco Office
Torreagüera Vivienda
Atresada by Xpiral
Balancing Barn by
MVRDV and Mole

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

The top floor of this office block in Italy by architects Modostudio is screened by faceted concrete panels that resemble Inca stonework.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

Accomodating the headquarters for fashion retailer Giorgia & Johns, the two-storey building provides clothing storage, a showroom and offices.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

The ground floor has a glazed curtain wall, in contrast to the heavy precast cladding on the upper floor.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

Glass partitions across the interior of the building allow natural light to filter through every office.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

Photography is by Julien Lanoo.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

See all of our stories featuring Julien Lanoo’s photographs »

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

Here are some more details from Modostudio:


Office building and logistic center

The project is located in a strategic industrial area, well connected with the main highway which bring traffic from the north to the south part of Italy. The site area is highly visible from the highway, and the client requests were to create a very strong and recognazible facade. The project, even in its extreme simplicity composition, aims to transmit the values of innovation, comfort, technology, relax and brand representation. Due to that, the facade represents the image of the building. It covers over 2000 sqm of company offices on two storeys.

The offices are located in the south part of the building along the short side of the building. All the offices are faced towards the Vesuvio Vulcan and they are on two storeys. The first storey hosts the main entrance hall which is located in a baricentric area. The main hall brings employees and clients to the other departments of the office: marketing, administration, design, product, retail, direction and the showroom.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

The offices are designed in order to guarantee the best flexibility. Floating floors and modular lights are able to give the possibility to modify the interior layout of the work places and of the vertical partitions. Most of the vertical partitions will be made of structural glass with the aim to improve the natural light inside the building. The neutral and light colors of the interior materials will give a very relaxing atmosphere. From the office windows employees will be able to experience a beautiful view of the Vesuvio vulcain, thanks to the visual study during the design phase.

The offices will be directly connected through doors with the logistic area of 11.500 sqm. The logistics area will be able to store all the products (clothes and accessories) of the company which ownes more than 100 showrooms in Italy and Europe. The logistic area is divided in nine different areas, each of one will host particular products. These areas have got loading and unloading gates on both sides. All around the building the parking areas allow to host more than 70 cars and trucks.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

Regarding the materials, due to the fact that the structure and the main envelope was made of precast concrete, we designed the main façade with the idea of push at the extreme value the use of the concrete. Reinforced concrete panels with a rhomboidal pattern in different sizes characterizes the main facade. These concrete panels are fixed to the main structural façade through a steel frame system. The panels are of 4 different sizes. The position and the rotation of the panels give to the facade a various image. The windows are realized opening a side of the panels which are connected with the main structural envelope through metal sheet plates.

The main façade, will be realized with these particular panels on the first floor, and on the ground floor the façade will be realized in a continuous glass curtain wall. The glass will have a strong low emission value able to give the best comfort inside the office. The facade will be visible during the day and during the night with appropriate light effects.

Office Building and Logistic Centre by Modostudio

All the other side of the building will be made by a precast concrete panel with a vertical texture. The loading and unloading gates will be covered with a metal roof totally integrated in the precast concrete structure. The roof will host a photovoltaic plant of 550Kw powered.

Location: Nola, Italy

Client: Giorgia & Johns Spa
Type: Private commission – Preliminary, final design, tender drawings, site supervision | under construction
Building area: 13.760 sqm – offices 2.260 sqm – logistics and laboratories 11.500 sqm

Site area: 20.235 sqm

Building cost: € 5.500.000,00

Year: 2008-2011
Consultants: engineering and coordination; Studio Visone & associati
Contractor: Edilizia Cinquestelle + Canova Prefabbricati
Lighting Systems: iGuzzini Spa.


See also:

.

Elisabeth and Helmuth Uhl
Foundation by Modostudio
Office Building by Personeni
Raffaele Schärer Architects
Office building by
Takeshi Hosaka

Torre Telefónica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Criss-crossing lengths of aluminium cover the glass facade of this Barcelona skyscraper by Spanish architects EMBA.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

The 25-storey Diagonal ZeroZero tower is located at the north-east end of a road that spans the entire city, overlooking both the city centre and the sea.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

The building has a diamond-shaped plan and a 40 metre-high atrium on the ground floor, which is open to the public.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Upper levels contain a two-storey auditorium, open-plan offices and a boardroom for telecommunications company Telefónica.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

More stories about skyscrapers on Dezeen »

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Photography is by Aleix Bagué and Eloi Hortoneda of EMBA.

The following details are from the architects:


Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero

The position of Diagonal ZeroZero Tower is exceptional: it is located at the origin of Diagonal, Barcelona’s main avenue; it is very visible from the city and from the coast; and it lays on the border between the consolidated city and the large expanses of public space in the Forum area. Its immediate surroundings consist of isolated buildings in a diverse context of different scales and uses that generate at the same time a metropolitan center and a local neighborhood still in formation.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

It is a contextual tower that has a double reading, from near and afar, in response to the two scales that such tall buildings must address. Taking the urban directions that form the perimeter of the plot as generators of its form, it is a trapezoidal prism, sharp and stylized, a clean and serene form, whitish and light, which reveals dynamic volumes that respond to the different specificities of the interior program and relate to the various heights of nearby buildings. The exterior responds to the city and the view from afar, and the interior responds to the program and the close-up vision.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

The corporate program that the tower hosts has a major public part that will connect it to urban flows, situated on the ground floor, which actually comprises three interrelated levels, around an atrium 40 meter high that follows the slope of the adjacent Plaça Fòrum. This direct visual and physical continuity with the city will help the tower benefit from civic activities and will facilitate citizens to participate and enjoy the activities in the building.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Inside the tower four singular points make the ensemble dynamic and generate a variety of interior experiences despite being a relatively conventional program of corporate headquarters: the main lobby atrium, facing Diagonal; an atrium on the 17th level that goes all the way up to the top of the building, facing the Maresme coast; the terrace and the double height the Board Room, located on the 23rd floor; and the auditorium, which occupies two floors and is split into an orchestra and two amphitheaters that can operate autonomously for smaller groups.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

The upper floors are open-plan office spaces, taking advantage of the structural system, a tube-in-tube scheme, with a bearing central core and a perimeter structure along the façade.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

The perimeter structure is split into two parts: very small and slender vertical interior pillars that only take compression stresses, and external elements that bear horizontal forces and torque. These create a diamond lattice facade that follows the stresses of each part of the building, with the greatest concentration of bearing elements in the lower half and less so in the upper parts. The floors are solid concrete slabs that transmit these horizontal forces to the central core.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

The facade is a modular curtain wall made of white aluminum profiles and extratransparent glass with white ceramic paint serigraphy, according to a vertical pattern that reinforces the slenderness of the building.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

In combination with the inner structure, placed every 1.35 meters, and the exterior structure, this pattern contributes to the diffusion of solar light and to glare control, generating interiors of great quality of perception.

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Location: Barcelona
Developer: Consorci de la Zona Franca de Barcelona
User: Telefónica sa
Years: 2006-2010
Plot area: 4.044 m2
Height: 110 m
Floors: 25 above ground, 3 underground
Above ground built area: 25.300 m2
Underground built area: 8.622 m2

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

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Team
Architects: EMBA_Estudi Massip-Bosch Arquitectes
Principal Enric Massip-Bosch
Project directors: Aleix Antillach, Elena Guim, Jon Ajánguiz
Architects: Esteve Solà, Ricardo Mauricio, Carlos Cachón, Cornelia Memm, Cristina Feijoo, Heidi Reichenbacher, Rita Pacheco, Rodrigo Vargas, Jana Alonso, Marta Marcet
Prescription + regulations: Montse Galindo, arch.
Document control: Glòria Andrés, arch.
Arch. students: Laura Rodera, Megan Charnley, Miguel Orellana, Jabi Fernández
Quantity surveyors: aumedes dap — Xavier Aumedes, Gemma Rius, Cesc Deharo, Anna Soler
Structures: MC2— Julio Martínez Calzón, Pietro Bartalotta, Luca Ceriani
Facilities: master enginyeria — Marc Jaumà, Luis Martin
Elevator consultancy: japssen — Johannes Maasberg
Safety control: aumedes dap — Marta Serra
Project management: aynova

Torre Telefonica Diagonal ZeroZero by EMBA

Click above for larger image

Rendering: EMBA, Rupert Maurus
Models: Eloi Hortoneda-EMBA, Andrea Sanglas
Photography: Aleix Bagué, Eloi Hortoneda-EMBA

Contractors
Initial works: dragados
Foundations: terratest
Underground construction: guinovart & osha
Tower and finishes: fcc
Installations: sogesa
Elevators: thyssen


See also:

.

R432 by Rojkind
Arquitectos
Huntingdon Estate
by AL_A
European Central Bank
by Coop Himmelb(l)au

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Hong Kong’s new design institute by French architects Coldefy & Associés, Architectes Urbanistes features a glazed box raised seven storeys above the ground on four lattice-steel towers that rest on a sloping, grass-covered podium.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The institute will educate up to 4,000 students. CAAU won the project at a competition held in 2006.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The institute, which opened in November last year, has an urban park on top while the podium conceals four auditoriums, a cafe, a sports hall, a gallery and a flexible event space.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

A 6om escalator ascends from street level to the suspended box. More projects in Hong Kong on Dezeen »

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Photography is by Sergio Pirrone.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The following information is from the architects:


Hong Kong Design Institute

The Hong Kong Institute of Design project was won at the end of 2006 by Coldefy & Associés, Architectes Urbanistes / CAAU, winners of the two stage international competition in which 162 teams from 23 countries took part. The CAAU studio was entrusted with the task of designing the project with architectural project management of the site directed by its Hong Kong partner, P&T Group. Intended to welcome 4, 000 students of artistic and multimedia disciplines in around 42, 000 m², the HKDI is commissioned by the Vocational Training Council Hong Kong. The HKDI is the first major facility built in Hong Kong by a French architect.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

2006, the competition

Thomas Coldefy and Isabel Van Haute, equipped with solid international experience, decided at the beginning of 2006 to take part in the international competition for the building of the Hong Kong Institute of Design. One hundred and sixty two teams submitted entries to the competition, the two architects were selected in August 2006 from five teams invited to take part in the second phase. They then went to Hong Kong, to collaborate with local partners architect, engineers, and a quantity surveyor partner according to the rules of the competition. They are named as winners in November 2006 by the international jury which included in particular, the American architect, Richard Meier.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Thomas Coldefy and Isabel Van Haute move to Hong Kong for five months at the beginning of 2007 to develop the project on site, to set up the team and to speak with the partners and clients and to immerse themselves in the spirit of the location.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Presented to the Hong Kong community and to future users, the project seduces them with its answer which is welltuned to educational needs, solicitous of the environment and local context, but also bold, ambitious and very open to the outside. In autumn 2008, work starts on the site after 18 months of project development led on site by the CAAU practice. And eighteen months later the HKDI – 42, 000 m² – is delivered. The first students take the giant, mechanical escalator at the beginning of the academic year in September 2010. This creation merited Thomas Coldefy and Isabel van Haute the “40 under 40″ prize, organised by the European Centre for Architecture, Art Design and Urban Studies and the Chicago Athenaeum.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The urban context

The building is located in the Tiu Keng Leng area, to the north east of Hong Kong Island, in the Sai Kung district, adjacent to the Tseung Kwan O area and Junk Bay. The area is served by the metro, on the Tseung Kwan O line, 20 minutes from HK Central, and also has a bus station. Although activity there is mainly residential and commercial, nature is also very much present for the site is surrounded by green hills and the view over Junk Bay is everywhere.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The building, located in the heart of the area, may provide the community with a meeting place by making its sports areas and auditoriums available; at the same time, it will bring an energy to the social life of the area by the presence of 4, 000 students within the campus, the numerous exhibitions and activities organised around the urban space it has created.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The project offers spatial reinterpretation of its built-up city context, where social interactions are teeming in the various bases of the buildings whereas they disappear vertically; the extra height provided by one part of the programme allows one to envisage interactions on different levels and creates new connections with the ground.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The architectural project

Metaphor for creativity about to burst forth, the “Blank Sheet” expresses the project’s intentions : bringing together and then presenting the multidiscipline nature and targets of the future Institute of Design. In concrete, glass and steel, its radical architecture, light and transparent, invites one to reflect on the combination of multiple and opposing situations : introversion and extroversion, modesty and exhibition, exclusivity and wide accessibility, micro and macro city, classicism and experimentation …

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Each functional element, first decomposed, amalgamates and interpenetrates or cuts itself off, by offering the project an immediate clarity from the outside which is very resonant in the city. The flexible and evolutionary plan allows one to envisage future liaisons with the neighbouring campus, LWL. The base of the building, the giant “ urban lounge “ favours meetings and exchanges, whilst taking advantage of internal and external green spaces and views of the countryside, thus fulfilling the liaison with the city.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The podium, whose gentle slope stands 7m below the King Ling Road, designed as a landscaped extrusion of the ground, directly linked to the urban environment on two levels – a common space and at the same time an external gallery – is characteristic of Hong Kong infrastructures. Open, sheltered by the platform above, it can host multiple events. The podium is made up of four auditoriums, a café, a space for exchanges with the design industry, a sports hall and an exhibition hall. For the roof, an urban park and sports grounds are available to the students and visitors from nearby. The large auditorium, with capacity for 700 seats, is intended to host conferences, seminars or classical music concerts, but also more recreational activities, fashion shows, pop music concerts, contemporary dance spectacles.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

An aerial platform

Covered in glass which is screen printed white, the immaculate and minimal volume of the platform, “like “an aerial city”, floats above the towers. It groups together the library, school administration offices as well as various related spaces. Its landscaped roof is accessible during exceptional events. The towers are at once the soul of the Institute, its structure and its vertical distribution. They express the diversity and the specific nature of the disciplines represented in the Design Institute. Their appearance accentuates the platform’s immateriality, a poetic sensation and reflection of a creative environment. This overall composition, emerging from the interpenetration of interlinked elements, defines the Institute as a timeless building and unveils its ambition of synergy, of a cutting edge school, of publicity and interactivity, destined to become a bright beacon in the city.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The materials

Concrete, glass and steel, three classic materials are implemented for a radical architectural process, a building of a different age reduced to its fundamental functions. The steel, processed into a white trellis, is used as a structural skin for both the inside of the platform and the outside of the towers. The glass of the platform gives it great permeability which strengthens the sensation of tension between the architectural elements. The structural cement of the podium is combined with glazed facades to exceed mere functionality and create a strong visual and spatial impact.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

The construction system

The overall stability of the towers is ensured by a vertical steel trellis structure called “diagrid”, equipped with a conventional beam-slab floor system in reinforced concrete. This “diagrid” system in steel offers excellent lateral rigidity supporting both the floating platform and the framework of the escalator which spans a length of 60m. HKDI is a pioneering project in Hong Kong, due to the choice of a peripheral steel trellis structural system.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

An innovative structure in composite reinforced concrete /steel trellis – with upper frameworks which are pre-stressed and post-stressed, diagonal beams in steel and lower frameworks in reinforced concrete – has been introduced and developed in order to support the floating platform which spans an area of 100 m x 100 m. The composite trellises are either simply supported, or placed overhanging from the towers in steel trelliswork. Uniformly distributed on the floating platform in two orthogonal directions, they are used to support the beam-slab floor system in reinforced concrete.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

This composite structure not only provides the floating platform with rigidity and sufficient resistance, it also meant construction costs could be optimised, in so far as the budget set by the client was not exceeded. The implementation of the project also required that the architects design a 60 m long escalator structure – the longest escalator in Hong Kong – supported by a three-dimensional steel structure without any immediate support. Over and above the general design of the infrastructure work, the dynamic analysis carried out meant there could be a guarantee that thevibrations caused by the escalator engines do not cause discomfort to users. Independently of the design, the ability to construct the floating platform has been, from the initial creative stage, one of the major concerns.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Sufficient tests were carried out in order to ensure that the proposed structure would be built without any risk and within a reasonable timeframe. Several construction methods have been researched, including preassembly of the main frame of the floating platform on the ground and then having it elevated into final position using heavy lifting appliances.  After assessing risks, difficulty and costs linked to construction in this way, the in situ manufacturing method with complex on site assembly procedures was adopted.  Finally, to reduce on site preassembly work to a minimum, the majority of secondary structural elements of the floatingplatform were built after completion of the main structures and removal of the scaffolding which supported them.

Hong Kong Design Institute by CAAU

Technical

Programme: 4 departments for the four major disciplines taught :

  • Department of Design,
  • Department of Fashion and Textile,
  • Department of Printing and Digital Media,
  • Department of Multimedia and Internet Technology.

Competition: Prize winning project, 2006
Client: Vocational Training Council Hong Kong
– Architect: CAAU / Coldefy & Associes Architectes Urbanistes
Project leaders Thomas Coldefy + Isabel van Haute
– Associate architects: P & T Group Hong-Kong
Structural Engineers: ARUP Hong Kong
MEP Engineers: PBA Hong Kong
Landscape architect: ACLA Hong Kong
Acoustician: SHEN, MILSOM & WILKE Hong Kong
Cost: Estimated total for works : 78, 212, 112 € excl tax
Area: 42 000 sq m
Schedule: Start of work October 2008
Delivery: September 2010
Official Opening: 25 November 2010


See also:

.

Institute of Natural History
by Arkís
French Pavilion by
Jacques Ferrier
IPost Building by
studiobv36

NEU 31 by Superblock

NEU 31 by Superblock

Aluminium shingles resembling shiny fish scales cover this office and apartment block in Vienna by Austrian architects Superblock.

NEU 31 by Superblock

The four-storey NEU 31 block contains two street-facing offices and four apartments that overlook adjacent woodland.

NEU 31 by Superblock

Internal walls are extruded on the garden facade to create a canopy and balconies.

NEU 31 by Superblock

A ground level passageway cuts through the heart of the building to a concealed courtyard, providing access to that offices and apartments.

NEU 31 by Superblock

More projects in Austria on Dezeen »

NEU 31 by Superblock

Photography is by Hertha Hurnaus.

Here is some more information from Superblock:


NEU 31

The concept of the overlapping spatial structure, open to the outside as well as inside, with symbiotically conjoined residential and office accomodation units is not merely a lip service here, it runs throughout all parts of the building – the spatial solution appeared that beneficial to the architects to occupy it by themselves.

NEU 31 by Superblock

The site Neuwaldegger Straße 31 combines the city with the country within a narrow strip of land. The building, erected on the plot 15-17 meters wide and 82 meters deep, is an attached design, with its north facade facing a high traffic street and its south side favoring the unspoilt view to the adjoining Vienna Woods.

NEU 31 by Superblock

Click above for larger image

The concept was to create a four-level diaphanous structure, which integrates all functions of living and working and yet offers enough privacy. All rooms and apartments are interlaced into each other and open not only to the outside but to the inside as well. This radically breaks with the classical scheme of a cube, which is bordered by four walls.

The center of the house is an open-top 30 sqm dimensioned courtyard, the glass panes of which connect the rooms of all levels optically and supply them with daylight at the same time. Both outer apartments on the above floors are configured over two storeys, that are glazed at the top and thus deliver light to the underneath. All of the apartments have spacious double-storey south terraces, that open up the structure of the house to the garden. Due to the open window areas of the ground floor the street space is as well provided with a vivid and exceptional scenery.

NEU 31 by Superblock

Click above for larger image

The surface of the house facing Neuwaldegger Strasse is rigide. It’s ‘fish-scale’ facade is coated in white aluminium folding shingles that cover the whole of it – from the roof ridge to the ground. Thanks to the front garden there is no need for a gutter, the building cleans itself by means of the channelless eaves every time it rains.

The building was wholly developed and financed by the architect office SUPERBLOCK, beginning with the land purchase. After the completion the accommodation units were sold to like-minded people, the garden is used collectively. At the moment the house NEU 31 accommodates 22 working and residing persons, 1 dog and 2 cats.

NEU 31 by Superblock

Click above for larger image

Office and Apartment Building, Neuwaldeggerstrasse / Vienna
Firm shell – airy core

Start of construction: May 2009
Completion: December 2010
Location: Neuwaldeggerstrasse 31, 1170 Vienna, Austria
Architects: SUPERBLOCK ZT GmbH
Client: NEU 31 Raum GmbH

4 apartments, 2 offices, 9 parking spaces
approx. 840 sq m floor area


See also:

.

Life and Power Offices by Unsangdong ArchitectsRooftop Office by Dagli+
Atelier d’Architecture
Studio for a Danish Artist
by Svendborg Architects

ECA/OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

A spiralling staircase is visible behind the gridded exterior of this office block in Vevey, Switzerland, by Swiss firm Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

The ECA/OAI Building comprises five levels of office space, overlooking a roof garden on the ground-floor plinth.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

This plinth contains an entrance lobby and cafe that can also be accessed by neighbouring buildings.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Photography is by Tonatiuh Ambrosetti.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

More Swiss architecture and interiors on Dezeen »

ECA-OAI-Office-Building-by-Personeni-Raffaele-Scharer-Architects

More stories about offices on Dezeen »

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Here is some text from the architects:


Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architects
ECA/OAI office building Vevey, Switzerland, 2011

The new building completes a city block in the centre of Vevey.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

The urban void behind the buildings was a residual space used as a parking lot and for utility purposes.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

The intervention took advantage of the void and turned it into a main hall for all the buildings of the block.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

The once neglected space became a common area with a big patio and a green roof, offering a garden view for all the buildings around it.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

The new five floors office building frames the roof garden without enclosing it and maintains a wide visual panorama on the city and the mountains.

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Architectural competition. First prize 2008. Construction 2009 – 2011

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Architects: Personeni Raffaele Schärer Architectes

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Client: ECA, Etablissement d’assurance contre l’incendie et les éléments naturels du Canton de Vaud

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

User: OAI, Office de l’assurance-invalidité pour le canton de Vaud

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects

Address: Rue des Entrepôts, 1800 Vevey, VD

ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects
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ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects
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ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects
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ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects
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ECA-OAI Office Building by Personeni Raffaele Scharer Architects


See also:

.

City Green Court
by Richard Meier & Partners
Life and Power offices
by Unsangdong architects
Office by C. F. Møller and
Kristin Jarmund Arkitekter

F A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo Architetti

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

This office for a law firm in Ragusa, Italy, by Chiavola + Sanfilippo Architetti has a translucent faceted wall framing the waiting room.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

The refurbishment project involved opening up the plan of F A Law Office and cladding the remaining structural walls in wood panels, stone slabs and bespoke wooden cabinets.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

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F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

Photographs are by Giorgio Biazzo.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

The information that follows is from the architects:


F_A Law Office / Chiavola+Sanfilippo architects

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

Gianluca Chiavola and Isabella Sanfilippo redesigned the interior of a Lawyer’s Office, into a 40s building in Ragusa (Sicily).

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

The previous office was subdivided in three sectors by two structural walls. This rigid tripartition has been resolved by absorbing the walls into free ‘objects‘, placed in order to organize the whole space into functions.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

This approach let us achieve the goal of making the experience of a fluid space, which is dotted with numerous changes of perspective.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

These ‘objects’ took the shape of a stone wall between the reception and the waiting room, oak casework between the offices and a tall bookcase in the master office, which in his back becomes a wooden boiserie in the waiting room.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

All those objects are linked by opal glass, which allows light to penetrate all areas.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

The stone-covered wall is made by smooth slabs with different sizes and thickness. The designed texture of the stone wall makes a shadow play, mostly in the evening, when recessed spots in the floor are on.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

In the waiting room an ethereal bent wall made by translucent Corian glacier ice is placed as a counterpoint to the monolithic presence of oak wood and stone objects.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

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The reception is featured by a dark-colored bent desk, which, as all of the casework, is custom designed and made.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

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The choice of materials and colors was suggested by the desire to create a soft and elegant environment which befits a Lawyer’s office.

F_A Law Office by Chiavola + Sanfilippo architects

Architects: Chiavola+Sanfilippo architects / Gianluca Chiavola, Isabella Sanfilippo
Location: Ragusa, Italy
Project Area: 95 sqm
Project Year: 2010
Casework: Fingestioni
Lighting System: Viabizzuno
Furniture: Arper, Vitra


See also:

.

McKinsey & Company
Hong Kong Office by OMA
No Picnic
by Elding Oscarson
OneSize
by Origins Architects

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Here some photos of the new Palo Alto offices of internet services company AOL, designed by San Francisco designers Studio O+A.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

The interior features an open-plan layout with exposed ceilings, concrete floors and meeting areas built from oriented strand board.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Cylindrical booths made of oriented strand board and translucent fiberglass form collaborative working spaces.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

The company’s logo is superimposed on imagery taken from abstract patterns, nature and pop culture to make custom-made wall coverings throughout the space.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Studio O+A were also responsible for the interiors of Facebook’s Palo Alto headquarters.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Photographs are by Jasper Sanidad.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Here are some more details from Studio O+A:


AOL Offices
Palo Alto, California

AOL launched a company-wide initiative to adapt to changes in online culture—which the company had been instrumental in creating in the first place. As part of this effort, AOL moved its West Coast headquarters to a new corporate space in Palo Alto and brought in Studio
Here are soem images of AOL’s new offices in O+A to give the office a fresh design.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

The existing space retained a distinctly 1980s corporate aesthetic: drop ceilings hanging over every office, high cubicles separating employees into tightly defined workstations, dark finishes, and oblique lines.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

O+A restored the space to a clean, white canvas—exposing the ceilings, stripping the walls to reveal the structure, and generally creating a spatial equivalent to the transparency that AOL was bringing to every aspect of its business.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Key to this approach is the concept of “honest materiality”—the embrace of materials and processes that originate in the construction industry and that increasingly provide the finish motifs for modern workplace design.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

At AOL, for example, oriented strand board (OSB), typically used by contractors to separate spaces on construction sites, was sanded, shaped, and finished to serve as a contemporary accent throughout the complex.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Exposed ceilings, concrete floors, expansive sightlines, and modern furniture all contribute to the industrial look. The result is a space that communicates what it is made of and how it was built.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

In keeping with this theme of transparency, O+A’s floor plan emphasizes collaborative space—a change from segregated private offices to open workstations and the collegiality of shared environments.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

Two features of the AOL design highlight this concept. The first is a series of circular pods positioned throughout the main work areas as impromptu meeting rooms. Constructed of OSB and translucent fiberglass, these cozy silos provide a space for informal collaboration and spontaneous creativity. To encourage that spontaneity, the pods are open to all employees and cannot be reserved.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

An even more prominent feature is the large, bright, collaborative space AOL has dubbed the Town Hall. Part kitchen, part play space, part kick-back area, the Town Hall also functions as an all-hands common area (Ariana Huffington spoke there when AOL acquired the Huffington Post), modeled after late-night eateries in San Francisco’s Mission District.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

The kitchen’s bench-seating, ample light, and bursts of color against a white palette go well with the game and relaxation area. Centrally located to bring together staff from departments that might not otherwise interact, the Town Hall is designed to foster the kind of creative cross-pollination for which tech companies like AOL are renowned.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

And then there are graphics. AOL’s new logo—the company’s initials in a simple white font—can be placed effectively on any colorful background. Those playful backgrounds vary throughout the headquarters and include both abstract patterns and imagery drawn from nature and pop culture. All wall coverings in the space are custom designed.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A

The design embodies the elements of the new AOL—transparency, collaboration, creativity, and playfulness—to create a stimulating environment for the firm’s staff.

AOL Offices by Studio O+A


See also:

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Facebook Headquarters
by Studio O+A
Skype office by
PS Arkitektur
Google office by
Scott Brownrigg

The Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

These archival buildings in Aylesbury, England, by London studio Stephen Marshall Architects are screened by a uniform line of oak beams.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Containing a collection of records for charity The Rothschild Foundation, the series of buildings around two courtyards also include meeting rooms and open-plan offices.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

An existing red-brick farmhouse is retained, while the adjacent new buildings are each clad in varying compositions of timber panels, white render and glass.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Internally, an oak gridshell roof structure creates a column-free reading room, overlooking the more formal of the two courtyards at the entrance to the site.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Photography is by Richard Bryant/arcaidimages.com

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

More projects in the UK on Dezeen »

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

The following details are from the architects:


The Rothschild Foundation

Brief

The brief for the project comprises space for the Rothschild Foundation Archive and office space for the charity investment organisation. The archive space includes the main reading room, offices for archive staff and the archive stores themselves which are naturally cooled to reduce energy use.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

The building is open to the public by appointment and will provide access to one of the most comprehensive family collections in Europe.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

The charity investment offices are within a two-story space across the courtyard garden from the reading room. This building contains meeting rooms and open plan office space set within a building similar in appearance to the archive group.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Between the office building and the archive group is situated the courtyard. This space provides a formally landscaped garden that serves as the arrival courtyard to the whole project.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

It is very much seen as a large outdoor room and is planted with Alemanchier trees and hedges.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Programme

Draft planning permission was obtained in July 2008. Works on site started in June 2009 with completion in February 2011.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Design

The solution to the Rothschild Archive is very much tied up in the name of the site, Windmill Hill. The Hill is one of the few elevated vantage points in South Bucks and as such is fortunate in having huge views over the surrounding countryside.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

The site has three principle views, directly south, to the southwest and to the west. The archive building and courtyard spaces are set out to bring these views into the building and courtyard. The western view in particular is “trapped” within the large opening defined by the 25m beam.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

Significant changes were made to the Estate access road to bring in spectacular views out to the north and west. The approach road was diverted north of the great wood allowing distant views of the manor house, the historic heart of the estate, and then a gradual curve was formed taking in the surrounding countryside until finally dropping to the formal arrival courtyard adjacent to the archive group. From here the visitor walks up the steps into the arrival courtyard and on turning at the top experiences the view to the west. This is the framed view, made more dramatic by the reflecting views on either side. Also within this arrival courtyard is the free standing oak screen to the reading room that offers shade and privacy.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

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There was always the intention to bring the existing red brick farmhouse into the composition of the new project. Indeed at one time the intention was to re-use many of the agricultural outbuildings as the new archive but this proved impractical due to their bad condition. The proportion of new building compared to the farmhouse was such that a method had to be found to re-dress the balance; hence the archive offices and archive store are conceived to an extent as continuations of the farmhouse.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

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The same roof tile and details are used and the buildings are clad in “louvered” timber, similar to the barns and sheds of the diary farm previously on the site. This move allows the reading room; courtyard and office building to take on a contemporary expression with rendered walls, zinc roofs and minimal landscape.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

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Materials and Method of Construction

The previous agricultural use of the site is strongly echoed in the materials and details. The principal materials are stone, oak, glass and render. Doors are formed in ledged braces and walls are rendered with simple openings. Windows have oak shutters. Cladding is installed over a steel frame with metsec infill.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

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The reading room and gallery roof structure takes the form of an oak gridshell. This structure has no steel and is formed from a geometric structure grid. Lights are recessed up into structure to form a simple wooden fabric.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

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NB. The project is exhibited at the Stables Buildings in the Waddesdon Estate. It is possible to view the Windmill Hill Archive by joining one of Waddesdon’s free Architectural Tours on the following dates: 2 & 4 June, 7 & 9 July, 4 & 6 August, 1 & 3 September or 6 & 8 October. Please visit the Waddesdon website for further information.

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architect

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Project Location: Windmill Hill, Waddesdon Estate, Aylesbury
Architect: Stephen Marshall Architects LLP

Rothschild Foundation by Stephen Marshall Architects

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Project Team:

Client: Alice Trust
Architect: Stephen Marshall Architects LLP
Structural Engineer: Thornton Tomasetti
Services Engineer: Max Fordham
Lighting Consultant: Speirs and Major Associates
QS: Selway Joyce
Landscape Designer : Mary Keen


See also:

.

EDF Archives Centre
by LAN Architecture
Apprentice Store
by Threefold Architects
Ty Pren by Feilden Fowles

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

OMA have completed this office interior in Hong Kong for management consultancy McKinsey & Company.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

The reception area is finished in timber, with tree patterns carved into the walls.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

The open-plan office has desks interspersed with glass telephone booths that glow either orange or red, depending on whether or not they are vacant.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

Photography is by Philippe Ruault.

McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office by OMA

More stories about OMA on Dezeen »

The following details are from OMA:


McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office

The design by OMA for the new McKinsey & Company Hong Kong office caters to the consulting firm’s need for a more intimate space that offers a greater sense of collaboration and community. McKinsey confronted OMA with a design question: How to rethink their work space in a way that is innovative and enhances the McKinsey experience?

The new office plan draws inspiration from the black bands on a universal barcode. Different functional spaces are organized in a set of horizontal bands arranged across the office. This design deviates from the traditional corporate office by emphasizing openness yet allowing for confidentiality where needed. Each band respectively accommodates rooms for partners, research teams, staff and clients. Rooms are no longer isolated cubicles solely occupied by one person, but rather a space that different staff members can share depending on their needs. Double glazed glass walls enhance the openness of the office while providing the levels of privacy that the client needs.

The band above the curved bay overlooking prosperous Central employs an open plan for both traveling consultants and some of the full time Hong Kong staff. The traveling consultant can choose where to sit when in town, while Hong Kong based staff have permanent seating. Flexible seating encourages efficient utilization of office space while accommodating the needs of a highly mobile consulting staff. The openness of the area also encourages interaction among the staff, echoing the spirit of teamwork that is central to how McKinsey works internally, as well as with clients.

The central band, with common areas for staff of all levels, is dedicated to promoting interaction between all staff members and cultivating a stronger sense of belonging. The warm wood of the reception area, fashioned into a playful tree pattern, welcomes visitors as they step into the office. This tree pattern extends into the office, suffusing the main work area with a strong hint of nature. The lounge at the eastern end of the central band, boasting a stunning view of Victoria Harbour, offers the best location for McKinsey Home Fridays. This monthly event gathers the frequent travelling and the Hong Kong based staff to share their experiences as a unified office. During regular work days, the staff can bring their laptop to the lounge and work while enjoying the Harbour view. At the other end of the central band is the Quiet Area, a secluded corner for contemplation or rest.

With staff sitting mostly in open areas, a feature of the new design is the addition of several dedicated spots for private conversations. Four circular glass telephone booths are located throughout the open area and lounge for this purpose. The phone booths glow red or orange depending on their vacancy. The colors not only add life to the neutral palette of the office, but also serve the functional purpose of letting staff know when a booth is available. A larger phone booth is provided for conference calls requiring more space for participants.

The new McKinsey & Company Hong Kong office accommodates the needs for both privacy and interaction, promoting efficiency in terms of the use of space while boosting staff productivity as well as their sense of community.

Project: McKinsey & Company Hong Kong Office
Status: Construction. Completion: May 2011
Client: McKinsey & Company
Cost: N/A
Location: Hong Kong
Site: 40/F, ICBC Tower, Citibank Plaza, 3 Garden Road Central, Hong Kong
Program: Offices

Partner in charge: David Gianotten
Project Architect: Alejandra Blanco Ackerman
Design Team: Karbi Chan, Yin Ho, Michael Kokora, Katja Lam, Mike Lim, Ted Lin, Catherine Ng, Jesung Park, Elaine Tsui, Patrizia Zobernig

Main Contractor: EDM Construction Ltd.
Acoustic Consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Ltd.
Furniture: EDM Construction Ltd., USM, Herman Miller
MEP Consultant: Ferrier Chan & Partners
Electrical Works: Cheung Hing E&M Ltd.
Plumbing & Drainage, MVAC Works: The Great Eagle Engineering Co. Ltd.
Fire Services: Keysen Engineering Co. Ltd.
Security Consultant: Chubb Hong Kong Ltd.
AV Consultant: Ultra Active Technology Ltd.


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The Surgery
by Post-Office
Skype office
by PS Arkitektur
Google office
by Scott Brownrigg