ON Headquarters with a pool of oil in the lobby by BLANCASMORAN and LSA Arquitectos

This headquarters for an oil and gas company in Mexico City features a square pool of reflective oil in the centre of the lobby (+ slideshow).

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The interior was designed by local studios BLANCASMORAN and LSA Arquitectos, who selected materials that evoke the client’s business.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

In the lobby, the architects inserted a metal plinth and filled the top 15 centimetres with a processed oil that produces a slick and highly reflective surface.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

Elsewhere, materials with rich patterned surfaces have been chosen to reference the millions of years it takes for geochemical processes to transform fossilised organic materials into crude oil.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

“Since oil is a material generated after million of years we thought about using materials that could suggest the passing of time as well so we chose one mineral material, in this case the Iranian Travertine, and one vegetal material, the walnut timber veneer,” architect Abel Blancas Morán told Dezeen.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The Iranian marble is used to cover a wall behind the reception desk that leads into the offices, where it also appears on walls and partitions.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The walnut veneer is used to clad the curving external wall of the circular boardroom and in the directors’ offices.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

“Each layer in the marble texture represents a period of time where different kinds of sediments settled and the result of all these years is this lovely texture,” said Blancas Morán. “In the case of the timber texture, each line also represents a year.”

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The round boardroom is situated in the centre of the interior plan with a circulation area containing breakout spaces surrounding it.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

Directors’ offices feature desks with glossy surfaces that reflect the warm wood panelling, while an open plan work space has a contrastingly minimal interior with rows of bright white desks.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

Photography is by Rafael Gamo.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The architects sent us this short project description:


ON Headquarters

Located west of Mexico City within the corporate and financial district boundaries, -ON- Headquarters is the base of operations of a company providing services to the oil and gas industry.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

After accessing the headquarters through the Lobby and its oil pool, the Board Room functions as the project´s epicentre and generates in its surroundings a concourse where most of the company´s activities and interactions take place. This concourse is the crossing and meeting point for directors, associates, assistants, interns, and guests.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

The nature of the company´s business is intended to be reflected in the materials chosen to allocate architectural brief. Being TIME the most important component in the creation of the industry´s raw material (oil), textures and surfaces expressing time and its traces where specifically chosen to contain the required spaces in the programme.

ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN

ON Headquarters
LSA Arquitectos / BLANCASMORAN (Imanol Legorreta Molin, Pablo Sepúlveda de Yturbe, Abel Blancas Moran)
Project Architect: Almendra Corona

Floor plan of ON Headquarters Mexico City by LSA Arquitectos/BLANCASMORAN
Floor plan – click for larger image

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Google’s colourful Madrid headquarters by Jump Studios

Colour-coded meeting rooms and private workspaces are tucked behind wooden arches at the Google offices in Madrid by London practice Jump Studios (+ slideshow).

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

For Google‘s headquarters in the Spanish capital, Jump Studios fitted out two floors of the Torre Picasso – a high-rise to the north of Madrid city centre.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

“The office spaces now boast a higher degree of flexibility and functionality, which fulfil the aspirations of the client who wanted a unique and friendly workplace with local character,” said the studio.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The lower level houses the reception area, lecture theatre and canteen, as well as office space.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Graphics and patterns are printed on the walls, ceiling and around the front of the reception desk.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The kitchen serving the canteen is surrounded by a curved wall clad in cork, which contains storage shelves and cabinets.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

On the floor above, timber arches designed to reflect traditional Spanish architecture separate the workspace around the outside of the floor from meeting rooms and cubicles for private work.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

There’s also a multi-functional recreation area with a ping-pong table and self-catering equipment.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Google is springing up new offices across the globe. Earlier this year Allford Hall Monaghan Morris applied for planning permission to construct a 27-hectare headquarters for the company in London’s King’s Cross.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Here’s the information sent to us by the designers:


Google Madrid HQ

The extensive fit out and refurbishment of Google’s Madrid HQ sets new standards in office interior design on the Iberian peninsula.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Jump Studios, a London based architecture practice with a recently launched satellite office in Lisbon, has completed Google’s new Madrid office using advanced materials to deliver a highly sustainable and inspiring new workplace for the company’s Iberian operations.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Jump Studios is currently shortlisted for the BD Architect of the Year 2013 Award in the Interior Architecture category for a range of projects including Google Madrid.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Overview

The Google Madrid project comprises the fit out of two floors in one of Madrid’s most prestigious high-rise buildings – Torre Picasso.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Working with the concept of a timber arched core element – a reference to the spatial and material qualities of traditional Spanish architecture – the scheme has greatly improved the efficiency of the floorplate and created a highly characteristic ambience that is relaxed and sophisticated at the same time.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The office spaces now boast a higher degree of flexibility and functionality, which fulfil the aspirations of the client who wanted a unique and friendly workplace with local character.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Now an approachable and usable space with a strong identity, productivity has greatly increased.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Project Details

The lower of the two adjacent levels occupied by the client houses the main reception, lecture theatre, canteen and a multi-functional area with fully equipped kitchen catering for the entire office.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

On the upper level can be found the bulk of the office space as well as more extensive breakout spaces with room for games, additional informal presentation areas, shower facilities, a massage room and hammock area.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The overall layout and arrangement of particular spaces and elements has been carefully considered and developed to suit the working style of the company in general while meeting the more exact needs and requirements of the local workforce.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The very specific acoustic requirements of the project for both the meeting rooms and the individual video conferencing cabins necessitated the careful selection of subcontractors and the very close co-ordination of all the teams involved to provide both robust and aesthetically pleasing solutions and details.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

The use of sustainable materials contributed to the project’s LEED Gold rating.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios

Project Delivery and Sustainability

The project was delivered in five separate phases, which allowed the offices to remain open throughout.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios
Level 1 – click for larger image

It involved a high level of co-ordination and collaboration between the architectural, engineering and contracting teams – Jump Studios, Deerns and Construcía with strong project management from Artelia Spain.

Google Madrid by Jump Studios
Level 2 – click for larger image

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UNStudio wins competition to design 60-metre tower for Munich

News: Dutch office UNStudio has won a competition to design a residential and office complex in the German city of Munich.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

UNStudio‘s design for the city’s new Baumkirchen Mitte development features a 60 metre tower with a facade divided by horizontal ribs that continue across the front of an adjoining housing block.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

“In the design for the facade of the building we chose for an articulated sobriety, incorporating contrasting scales of detail,” said architect Ben van Berkel. “The horizontal bands which wrap and organise the building present a sober articulation from a distance, however as you get closer to the building you discover a refined scale of intricate, complex detailing.”

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

Metal and wood will combine to create contrast on the building’s facade, which the architects explained will give the building “the appearance of a custom-made furniture piece for the urban space.”

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

The office building will house flexible work spaces with foyers, lobbies and meeting areas providing neutral and adaptable public areas.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

Flexibility is also key to the design of the residential wing, with floor plans that can be configured in numerous ways and individual apartments that can be customised to meet the needs of their occupants.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

A multipurpose roof garden will incorporate ornamental plants and grasses, vegetable gardens, bee hives, play areas and rainwater harvesting. The linear design of the landscaping is influenced by the building’s location on the site of a former rail yard.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich
3D visual of the building

UNStudio collaborated with OR else Landscapes on the design, which was selected over entries from firms including BIG and J. Mayer H. Architects. It will be built at the entrance to the Baumkirchen Mitte development, which is located between Munich East station and the Berg am Laim suburb.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich
3D visual of living in the open concept

Here’s a press release from UNStudio:


Ben van Berkel / UNStudio’s design selected as winning entry for the Baumkirchen Mitte in Munich

UNStudio’s design for the Baumkirchen Mitte in Munich has been selected as the winning entry from a shortlist of 6 finalists which included, among others, BIG Architects, Juergen Mayer H Architects and Schneider + Schumacher Architects. 
UNStudio worked in collaboration with OR else Landscapes on the design for the 18,500m2 residential and office complex located in the east of Munich. With its 60 metre high tower the project will become the focal point for the entrance to the new Baumkirchen Mitte development.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

Ben van Berkel: “In the design for the facade of the building we chose for an articulated sobriety, incorporating contrasting scales of detail. The horizontal bands which wrap and organise the building present a sober articulation from a distance, however as you get closer to the building you discover a refined scale of intricate, complex detailing.”

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

New work 


Concentrated individual work, brainstorming sessions and impromptu meetings are fast becoming part of contemporary work culture and require spaces and layouts that can respond flexibly to these new demands. In UNStudio’s design neutral spaces, such as foyers, lobbies and meeting areas are used to establish the identity of the building. The design combines both zones that guarantee maximum flexibility for varying combinations of users and exclusively designed areas that provide spaces for communication and creativity.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich

New living

Changing demands and expectations in contemporary living form the starting point for the residential areas within UNStudio’s design. Flexible accommodation types are incorporated which afford variable constellations and offer the possibility to combine adjacent units. In addition, flexible floor plans enable a variety of configurations in the apartment layouts, thereby directly addressing the specific and individual needs of the residents.

North facade of UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich
North facade

Outdoor spaces vary in scale and form an integral part of the apartments. The living experience is therefore not confined to the dwellings alone, but instead begins as you arrive at the building and enter the circulation areas. Thereafter it extends into shared and private outdoor spaces. This extension of the living concept stimulates interaction between residents and creates a balance between activated public spaces and the need for privacy.

South facade of UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich
South facade

Duality

The facade design reflects the duality of the programme, with two contrasting materials defining the look and feel of the building. Bright metal forms the background, lending the structure a contemporary and light aesthetic, whilst the contrasting use of wood affords the building the appearance of a custom-made furniture piece for the urban space.

UNStudio wins competition for Baumkirchen Mitte complex in Munich
Section

A sustainable living landscape

The remaining traces on the location of a previous rail yard form the blueprint for the structure of the roof gardens. The linear frameworks in the landscaping of the gardens accommodate fields of kitchen gardens and play areas, as well as rows of ornamental grasses and flowering perennials and are inspired by the spontaneous vegetation of the track fields. Through the integration of vegetable gardens, systems for rainwater harvesting, composting and beekeeping areas the roof garden becomes more than just a recreation area. It additionally plays an important ecological role by contributing to a sustainable living environment. The sustainability concept for the complex is based on a requirement specific application of different types of façade, while reducing active technical building components.

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Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

This office building in the Netherlands was designed for property developers called Orangerock, so architects Möhn + Bouman gave it a faceted orange facade made from sheets of Corten steel (+ slideshow).

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

Located in the town of Emmen, the building forms part of a site that Orangerock plans to develop in the next ten years. The client asked Dutch architects Möhn + Bouman to convert an abandoned house into a short-term office until then.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

“The temporary character of the design allowed us to refrain from renovation and adapting,” said the architects. “Instead we designed a Corten steel screen that masks the old building.”

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

The new Corten steel facade wraps around the front and sides of the former house, completely hiding the original architecture behind an asymmetric volume with a large tinted-glass shopfront.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

Strips of lighting sit within narrow recesses in the walls, intended by the architects to look like raindrops. Gutters are hidden behind the facade, while one section has been cut away to avoid colliding with a group of large rocks.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

“The abstraction of the material and details emphasises the folded geometry,” added the architects.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

The interior of the house was cleaned but most spaces were left intact, apart from a series of recent extensions that have been removed.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

Photography is by Sarah Blee.

Here’s a project description from Möhn Bouman Architects:


Steel Screen, Emmen, Netherlands

The project is situated in a former rural town that grew over the last decades into a medium-sized regional city. As a result of this process large parts of the city are transforming gradually towards a more urban character. The client is an innovative project developer, keen to play an active role in this process. Recently they acquired a piece of land close to the city centre for future redevelopment. On the site some old buildings with a rural character can still be found. Once the redevelopment takes place, expected within ten years, these buildings will be demolished. Until that moment the developer decided to use one of them, an old house, as his office.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

The challenge was to design an intervention to turn the house in a more representative office. The temporary character of the design allowed us to refrain from renovation and adapting. Instead we designed a Corten steel screen that masks the old building. Corten steel rapidly develops an equal layer of rust which protects it from further decay.

As a start the building was stripped of more recent extensions and cleaned. Precise measurements were then taken and translated into a 3D drawing, providing the basis for the design. The measurements included some large rocks that were found on the site, residues of the ice age, placed at a corner of the house.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman

Based on the resulting 3D files the steel of the screen was completely computer-cut, allowing a sophisticated detailing. In the roof small strips of blue light were introduced, like raindrops, and the name of the client was cut out of the steel. To blend with the rusted steel a special glass laminate was developed, combining coated glass and color layers. The abstraction of the material and details are emphasising the folded geometry, which in turn reacts on the shape of the house. To prevent staining the glass, rusty water from the roof is guided to a hidden gutter. The gutter ends above a massive rock, gradually turning into an Orange Rock over the years.

Corten steel office facade by Möhn + Bouman
Construction template

Location: Emmen, the Netherlands
Client: Orangerock Projectontwikkeling
Design: 2011
Status: completed
Architect: Möhn Bouman Architects

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De Burgemeester office with an angular wooden staircase by Studioninedots

An angular wooden staircase ascends the lobby of this office renovation in the Dutch town of Hoofddorp by Amsterdam architects Studioninedots (+ slideshow).

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Studioninedots was tasked with renovating an entire 1970s office building. The architects began by removing an existing staircase and enlarging the space around it to create a void that visually connects a communal area on the ground floor with the levels above.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

The staircase acts as the focal point of this large atrium and was made by cladding a steel structure in plywood sheets to create a series of bridges and access points to the various floors.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Broad treads encourage spontaneous interaction between employees of the different firms that occupy the shared offices.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

“The staircase as a tool for communication, lends the building a collective identity,” said the architects. “As a vertical lobby that offers views of all floors, it tells occupants that they are part of a larger world.”

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Elsewhere, the architects employed a pared-back approach so that they “could channel more resources into one spectacular, shared amenity that boosts the whole building” – the staircase.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Latticed panels milled from the same plywood used for the staircase create decorative railings around the edges of the atrium.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Removing suspended ceilings revealed cast concrete beams that contrast with the warm wood of the staircase.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Large windows fill the lobby with natural light and provide views of the surrounding neighbourhood from every level.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

Photography is by Peter Cuypers.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


De Burgemeester renovation by Studioninedots

From an abandoned and anonymous office building to a vibrant multi-tenant complex. That’s De Burgemeester, a commercial property in Hoofddorp renovated by Studioninedots and opened on 5 November 2013. The secret of the transformation? A vertical lobby featuring an open staircase where people meet face to face, a space that brings people together both literally and figuratively.

We space. That’s our name for this communal area at the heart of the building. It’s a place that brings people together. Out of the concrete floors we carved a 14-metre-tall void that houses a giant staircase that cuts diagonal lines through the void as it makes its way upwards, linking the different floors to one another. Now people are on the move, making their way back and forth on the timber steps. Some of them linger for a chat, and there’s space on the broad treads to sit for a moment. The sound of chatter and the aroma of coffee from the café below now fill the hall. Most of the office space has already been leased, bringing the building back to life once again.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

De Burgemeester was part of the ‘cloud’ of blue foam models on show in the Dutch pavilion at the 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale. In an exhibition entitled Vacant NL, the pavilion housed a vast model that depicted all the unoccupied buildings in the Netherlands. The exhibition proved confrontational for the way it captured the sheer scale of empty space and rendered it visible at a glance, and for the conclusion expressed: the era of growth is finished, and scarcely anything more needs to be built.

At the same time, that sea of blue also contained a promise. Vacant NL posed a creative challenge to architects: discover the potential of these buildings; adapt them for our era of economic stagnation and population decline; transform them, temporary or otherwise, into flexible and sustainable structures; to ensure a new appreciation of these buildings.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

What’s more, the crisis offers opportunities. The pressure of cost-cutting measures creates scope for other values. More does not necessarily mean better, and that’s something increasing numbers of people are coming to realize. Born out of the idea of cutbacks and facilitated by the internet, a flourishing culture of sharing has emerged.

Thanks to Greenwheels, Peerby and Airbnb we borrow and rent cars, tools and even homes from one another. People in more and more cities are setting up resident associations to make their neighbourhoods more sustainable. And vacant sites are taken as ‘test sites’ for new spatial developments such as urban farming. The sense that ‘everybody for himself’ no longer works, and the feeling that we can really achieve something by joining forces, is gaining widespread support. And, just as important: we’ve come to realize that it’s all much more fun together.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

The renovation of De Burgemeester is a response to these developments. Ymere housing association granted the building a new life as an office complex and in 2012 asked us to draw up a proposal. But the persistent crisis thwarted that ambition; it turned out to be unfeasible for a single client to occupy the entire building. That’s the reason it was decided to team up with an investor called Lingotto and turn the building into a multi-tenant complex.

Since office space with all sorts of extra amenities was no longer a realistic option with a lower budget, we completely changed our original proposal. Workspaces are fitted out without any frills so that we could channel more resources into one spectacular, shared amenity that boosts the whole building. The sculptural staircase, a social space where people can meet, a place that connects people to one another both literally and figuratively. The staircase as a tool for communication, lends the building a collective identity. As a vertical lobby that offers views of all floors, it tells occupants that they are part of a larger world. And precisely that feeling is the major quality of the renovated building.

De Burgemeester Hoofddorp by Studioninedots

On top of that, we maximized those qualities that De Burgemeester already possessed: views of the surrounding neighbourhood and generous amounts of daylight. The openness and transparency achieved through the addition of glass partition walls and the voluminous atrium ensures views to the outside from almost everywhere within. Suspended ceilings have been removed to reveal the authentic concrete floor with T-beams. Now this rough, column-free load-bearing structure determines the atmosphere.
The timber-clad stairs and banisters add warmth to the interior. The staircase is constructed of steel and wrapped with simple sheets of plywood with a transparent varnish finish. Custom-made railings are milled from the same sheets using an affordable industrial technique that lends the result an almost handcrafted appearance.

To complete the story, we also designed the building’s visual identity. The leitmotif for the colourful graphic design is the comma, an optimistic punctuation mark that evokes positive expectations. De Burgemeester is already well on its way to meeting those expectations.

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Arts Council England offices with hinged tables by Moxon Architects

The tables at these offices for Arts Council England by Moxon Architects can be hoisted out of the way to lie flat against the walls when not in use (+ slideshow).

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

British firm Moxon Architects designed the offices for the West Midlands branch of Arts Council England as part of its renovation of an industrial building on the Birmingham Canal.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

The tables are located in a multipurpose space on the ground floor that is used for activities including meetings, presentations and dining.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

“The storage space available for movable furniture is not great, so it made a lot of sense to cater for everything in one place and simply hoist the tables out of the way,” Tim Murray from Moxon Architects told Dezeen.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

Staff can raise or lower the tables by pushing a button, with a weight inside the leg keeping it vertical so it docks precisely with a steel base plate on the floor.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

Reclaimed timber is used to clad a small meeting room and to create durable panelling throughout the offices that unifies the different spaces.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

A meeting room housed in an extension at the rear of the building features a raw concrete ceiling, which the architects said was retained because “the artless beauty of it was too appealing to cover up again.”

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

The architects were responsible for the complete renovation of the building’s ground floor, which includes a new entrance, reception and staircases. A further phase will see the creation of offices, archiving and library facilities on the upper levels.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

Photography is by Simon Kennedy.

Here’s some more information from Moxon Architects:


ACE / Arts Council England – Birmingham

The third project undertaken by the practice for the Arts Council England is the largest so far; entailing two phases split across all three levels of an industrial building on the Birmingham Canal.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

Phase 1 of the project is the extensive improvement of the ground floor of the building, comprising both fit out and renovation / restoration works to the listed fabric of the building.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

The entire ground floor has been redesigned in order to meet full DDA compliance as well as provide a qualitatively much improved facility.

Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects

With a sequence of progressively more public spaces and opportunities for large and small gatherings the ground level is envisaged by the client as being a forum for the Arts Council’s activities in region. As such a number of different design approaches have been brought together into the scheme – for intimate groupings a soft cushioned compartment; an open area for children or informal meetings; and a flexible space for dining, lectures or larger gatherings. In addition formal meeting and lecture rooms have been arranged off a ramped circulation spine, with acoustic separation provided by specialist glazing to maintain visual continuity.

Ground floor plan of Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The first phase also includes a new entrance / reception area and the vertical circulation to the upper levels of the building. The proposal makes use of reclaimed timber throughout as a wall cladding and finishing to new joinery, materially tying together the variety of spaces provided.

Client: Arts Council England / West Midlands Regional Office
Stage: Completed 2013

Concept diagram of folding tables of Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects
Concept diagram of folding tables – click for larger image
Section view of folding tables of Arts Council England West Midlands Office by Moxon Architects
Section view of folding tables – click for larger image

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Frank Gehry-designed Facebook offices planned for London and Dublin

Frank Gehry-designed Facebook offices now planned for London and Dublin

News: architect Frank Gehry is designing new offices for social network Facebook in London and Dublin.

Frank Gehry first started working with Facebook last year on the design of its new Silicon Valley campus, but will now work with the company to replace its existing offices in the UK and Irish capitals.

The new London headquarters will reportedly occupy three floors of 10 Brock Street – a British Land development at Regent’s Place, London. With an area of 8000 square metres, it will double the size of the existing Covent Garden address and will place Facebook in the same building as rival social network Twitter.

“Our new home will give us the space to double the number of people working at Facebook London and build on what we’ve achieved there over the past few years,” Facebook’s European chief Nicola Mendelsohn told the Evening Standard.

Facebook’s Dublin staff will relocate to a new 11,000 square-metre space in Grand Canal Square, allowing capacity for up to 1000 employees.

Gehry, who is best-known for buildings such as the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao and the Walt Disney Concert Hall, is also designing an office in New York for the company’s engineering team. He is still working on the Silicon Valley campus after being asked to “tone down” the original designs.

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Offices and a studio in a renovated military uniform factory by Sauerbruch Hutton

Berlin practice Sauerbruch Hutton has renovated and extended a former Prussian military uniform factory to accommodate its own offices and an artist’s studio.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

Sauerbruch Hutton added a two-storey extension with a grey render and zigzagging roof that contrasts with the listed brick building, which is the largest in a cluster of former barracks.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

“The building as a whole appears to be made of two halves – a historic brick ‘base’ and a new addition,” the architects told Dezeen.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

A long glass wall running along the centre of the renovated second floor separates a series of offices from a large open-plan space, while a staircase cast from concrete connects the two new storeys.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

The new third floor contains a reception area and conference room that flank a gallery leading to a library and a series of smaller offices and meeting rooms.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

Roof lights in the extension introduce daylight into the offices, while large windows frame views of the trees outside.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

Sauerbruch Hutton also created a studio and apartment for conceptual artist Karin Sander in the eastern portion of the building.

Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton

Studio spaces with skylights, bedrooms, a kitchen, a library and a living room are spread across two storeys, with a roof terrace providing outdoor space.

Site plan of Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton
Site plan – click for larger image

A cast concrete wall separates the expansive 5.5-metre-high studios from the living spaces, with an opening connecting the main studio to the raised reference library.

Floor plan explosion diagram - Studio and Loft Karin Sander by Sauerbruch Hutton
Floor plan explosion diagram – click for larger image

The project was completed in 2009 but has not been widely published. We recently published a church in Cologne designed by Sauerbruch Hutton, which is clad in diagonal timber planks.

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MSGM fashion headquarters in a former blacksmith’s workshop by Fabio Ferrillo

Italian architect Fabio Ferrillo has transformed a derelict blacksmith’s workshop into the headquarters of a Milanese fashion brand.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

Fabio Ferrillo retained many of the building’s original features, including the exposed brick walls, abandoned machinery and suspended pulleys, but added a new cement floor and industrial ventilation system.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

“The space was seriously run-down, but its crude and post-industrial aesthetic is now its most fascinating and contemporary aspect,” said Ferrillo.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

The building’s open-plan shell is divided into an office space, research archive, design area, kitchen, meeting room and courtyard.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

New partitions painted in grey and pink contrast with the raw brickwork and provide a backdrop for additions including a nineteenth century marble fireplace that was imported from France.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

An unused air shaft introduces light to a corner of the private office, while mirrors act as screens in the large empty doorways that separate the main meeting room from the design area.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

Vintage furniture and lighting sourced from The Netherlands and France combines with colourful canvases by French artist Nathalie du Pasquier, which Ferrillo added to complete the “eclectic, refined and contemporary space.”

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

Earlier this year, a dilapidated car showroom in London was transformed into a flexible communal workspace and Polish architects PL.architekci created a new studio for themselves inside a disused loft.

Photography is by Diego Diaz.

Here’s a project description from Fabio Ferrillo:


MSGM headquarters by Fabio Ferrillo

Architect Fabio Ferrillo’s project for the new MSGM headquarters was born from the intuition of the brand’s Creative Director, Massimo Giorgetti; together they gave new life to an abandoned early 20th-Century blacksmith’s workshop in Milan’s Porta Romana borough. The space was seriously run-down, but its crude and post-industrial aesthetic is now its most fascinating and contemporary aspect thanks to a careful work of preservation and reinterpretation.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo

A large access portal, two distinct areas, an irregular floor plan, walls in plain brickwork, abandoned machinery and suspended pulleys maintain the space’s productive spirit but are combined, in an unprecedented layout, to a new cement flooring and deliberately flashy steel and zinced plate conducts and ventilation systems.

The preserved and renewed brickwork is paired with the dove-grey and pink tones of the new irregular partitions, a combination that creates surprising perspectives, such as the fireplace: an original mid-19th-Century Louis Philippe in grey marble specifically imported from the south of France. The great central skylight, the doors and windows have been carefully salvaged, while an unused air shaft has been connected to the private office to be used as a scenographic source of light.

MSGM headquarters in Milan by Fabio Ferrillo
Plan- click for a larger image

The decor is the result of prolongued research: the original 1950s pieces by Friso Kramer come from Flanders, the grey and yellow shelving, the curved wooden chairs, the private office’s armchairs, handpicked from galleries in Antwerp and Paris, just like the grand central table, an original Ico Parisi from 1960, reimported to Italy from a gallery in Belgium.

The ceiling projectors, all from abandoned industrial sites of the île de France, are paired with lamps of typical italian design. The beautiful canvases by Nathalie du Pasquier give the finishing touch to this eclectic, refined and contemporary space. It is the image of the brand, MSGM: in constant evolution.

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blacksmith’s workshop by Fabio Ferrillo
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The Operators office in a converted storage unit by Post-Office

Design studio Post-Office has transformed an old photographic storage unit in east London into an office and creative studio (+ slideshow).

The Operators by Post Office

Post-Office, who also designed Dezeen’s north London office, renovated the space for The Operators, a digital design agency in Shoreditch.

Designer Philippe Malouin and his team wanted the space to reference the building’s industrial history, so they retained the existing concrete floor and left pipes and wiring exposed across the ceilings.

The Operators by Post Office

The company directors’ rooms are modelled on the offices of foremen in industrial warehouses, which are typically surrounded by glazing so occupants can supervise activities going on outside.

“The most important thing the client requested was a meeting space and a kitchen to fit eight people,” Malouin told Dezeen. ” It was quite a difficult brief because we only had one wall of light to work with. This was the reason why we made the foreman’s offices – if we’d built regular offices the whole space would have been shut out of natural daylight.”

The Operators by Post Office

Steel beams with a dark red coating conceal light fittings, while mesh screens and green-painted partitions separate the offices from the corridor.

“The olive green colour would have been used in the building’s original era. It’s a neutral yet masculine colour, which suits the space as all of the company’s staff are men,” Malouin added.

The Operators by Post Office

The designers reproduced the company’s circular logo using CNC-cut MDF and inserted it into a gap in the kitchen wall so it sits flush with the surface.

Desks and cupboards throughout the interior are constructed from bare plywood.

Here’s a short description from Post-Office:


The Operators

We were approached by the directors of “The Operators”, a digital agency in Shoreditch, to transform a site in an old photographic storage unit into a creative studio to house their ever-growing team.

The space needed to be flexible, provide both private and communal spaces, while allowing for daylight to travel throughout the space.

The Operators by Post Office
Photographic storage unit before renovation

Given the restricted size of the site, it was important to make the most of the space available. The design of the space borrows from the aesthetics of the building’s victorian industrial history.

The offices of the directors were based on industrial ‘foreman’s offices’, while many of the materials used were reminiscent of the era.

The Operators by Post Office
Photographic storage unit before renovation

Red oxide was used to finish the metal beams concealing the indirect soffit lighting, and mesh screens were used to facilitate the flow of light through the space while separating the corridors from the works spaces. Bare plywood was also used throughout for the work desks, tables, storage and kitchen.

Working with a small budget and tight deadlines, the space was successfully transformed form an old storage unit to a fully functional work space.

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storage unit by Post-Office
appeared first on Dezeen.