Early Childhood Centre in Wassenaar by Kraaijvanger

Rotterdam studio Kraaijvanger has added two new buildings to a school in a suburb of the Dutch capital, The Hague, with pitched roofs and rustic materials that reference the site’s original role as a farm (+ slideshow).

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Kraaijvanger‘s additions to the American School of The Hague include a sports hall and a larger barn-like building that houses a nursery, 12 classrooms and a gym for babies and children up to the age of six.

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The new “barn” adjoins a sixteenth-century farmhouse that the architects are currently renovating. The site’s historic significance meant that the height and shape of the buildings had to correspond with the existing agricultural structures.

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“We weren’t allowed to build any higher than the old farm buildings so we had to bury the lower storey below ground,” architect Annemiek Bleumink told Dezeen.

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Wood is used for the external cladding to tie the buildings in with their rustic setting, as well as for internal beams and columns that continue the natural look indoors.

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“Because the buildings are used by small children we wanted to use warm materials for both the exterior and the interior,” explained Bleumink.

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Large windows in the sloping roof fill the nursery classrooms with natural light, while a glazed walkway traverses a void between that part of the building and an atrium housing the main entrance.

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A bridge crossing a public road links the “barn” with the sports building, which has sloping roofs covered in plants that further emphasise the scheme’s agrarian aesthetic.

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Other schools featured on Dezeen recently include a wooden nursery and elementary school in France with a roof covered in plants, and an offset gabled classroom and play area at a school in England. See more schools »

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Photography is by Ronald Tilleman.

Here’s a full project description:


School as farmyard: expansion of the American School of the Hague with the Early Childhood Center & renovation monument farm Ter Weer.

As a farm with several buildings, The American School of The Hague in Wassenaar is expanded for The Early Childhood. This set-up fits the small scale of the area. On the location stood already the 16th century farmhouse ‘Ter Weer’. The farm is restored and incorporated into the whole. The entire complex is integrated into the environment and the landscape. The school has a capacity for 250 children from 0 to 6 years and includes a nursery, twelve classrooms, a gym and a multipurpose room. The entrance is in line with the arrival route over the Deijlerweg and is designed as a monumental glass heart between the farm and the ‘barn’.

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Dialogue between old and new

The dialogue between the two buildings, can be felt both inside and outside. The expansion partly deepened to encrouch the monument is not too much. The new and the old are connected to each other by a bridge in the new atrium. The materialization of the new building refers to a barn by applying wood substructures, caps and wooden parts for wall cladding.

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Program

The barn houses the classrooms. Because of the inclined slope they all recieve enough daylight. The classrooms are characterized by the entry of natural light, the use of healthy materials and the direct relationship with the surrounding landscape. In farmhouse are located the administrative functions of the school a lunch room for 100 children, a kitchen, a nursery, a library and a local labor.

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Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The sports facilities are housed in a separate building. It contains a gymnasium, changing rooms, a canteen and the clubhouse of the local handball association. The building is designed as two interlocking volumes with sloping green roofs, matching the shape of the extension and rural character of the area. A large window is placed in the gymnasium overlooking the connecting bridge to the main building and offers insight from the school and outside play areas.

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First floor plan – click for larger image

Green schoolyards

Around the school are several playgrounds to suit the different age groups. They are designed by design studio van Ginneken with greenery, seating and educational components such as a vegetable garden. Hedges, wooden fences and gentle slopes locks provide a friendly separation between the different squares. In an adjacent site parking there are gravel pavement and rows of trees between the parking.

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Basment floor plan – click for larger image

Total integration

The building is fully integrated into the environment and the surrounding landscape. The design of the landscape is based on the objectives of the school. A healthy environment where young children playfully learn why sustainability matters. By using water, natural materials and to show how energy is generated children come in a natural way in contact with this theme. The building makes use of solar energy, LED fixtures, cold and heat storage, wastewater reuse and craddle to craddle materials such as Accoya cladding.

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Section – click for larger image

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by Kraaijvanger
appeared first on Dezeen.

Joyce & Jeroen House renovation by Personal Architecture

Dutch studio Personal Architecture has overhauled a traditional townhouse in The Hague by adding mezzanine floors, a glass elevation, a triple-height kitchen and a spiral staircase.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Whilst the front half of the three-storey house retains its original facade and layout, Personal Architecture removed the brickwork garden elevation and replaced it with a steel framework and full-height glass wall.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

The architects then cut away sections of the first and second floors, creating a triple-height kitchen filled with natural light.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Four new mezzanines overlook the kitchen from the side of the house, providing a new bathroom, library and pantry that feature untreated pine walls and floors. A steel staircase spirals up between the levels and leads up to a rooftop terrace and hot tub.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Small sets of steps connect the four mezzanine levels with the three existing floors of the house, while the original staircases provide a link between floors at the front of the house.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above the kitchen, a translucent polycarbonate wall lets light into the master bedroom though a walk-in wardrobe positioned at its back.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

A wire-fence balustrade creates a balcony on the second floor, so residents can look down from an office to the kitchen below.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Other interesting house renovations from the Netherlands include a thatched cottage in the seaside town of Noordwijk and an old apartment block converted into a house. See more Dutch houses on Dezeen.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Photography is by René de Wit.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Here’s some more information from the architects:


The dilapidated state has necessitated a thorough reinforcement of the foundation and load-bearing structure of the entire house, opening up extraordinary possibilities in an otherwise commonplace apartment renovation.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

The combination of ambitious design visions and a large measure of trust from the client have resulted in a rigorous and uncompromising redesign, in which voids and split levels accentuate the full height of Den Haag’s typical row houses.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

The potential of the brick structure, the details such as glass-in-lead frames, and the characteristic “en-suite” room divisions were the deciding factors in purchasing the house, according to the clients.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: site plan

The tension between antique features and modern techniques is very evident in the redesign plan. The classical street façade is restored to its former glory, from ground to third floor.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: ground floor plan

Behind the doors of the “en-suite” element, a complete change is taking place. The rear façade is removed and clad with glass to a full height of 11 meters. The floor levels are detached from the façade, creating a void that spans three levels and generating an optimal source of daylight.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: mezzanine floor plan

In the back of the house, the load-bearing wall between the corridor and the living room is replaced with a steel construction. Four new floors with a net height of 2.4 meters protrude from this construction. These floors remain openly linked to the existing floor levels. The interplay of voids, the split-levels and the glass façade, all create a spectacular drama between interior and exterior on the one hand, and between the existing and new floors on the other.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: first floor plan

The intervention in the back of the house can be interpreted as a three-dimensional, L-shaped element of five storeys, accessed by a new steel spiral staircase. The staircase brings a new dynamic between the different parts of the house and makes a separation between owners and guests possible. Vertically, the L-shaped element ends in a roof-terrace with jacuzzi and outer kitchen that lies far above the balconies of the lower floors.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above second floor plan

This rigorous redesign project has reorganized the total accessible surface of the house towards an excess of floor space, generating more rooms and more daylight. To the owner, the residence promises an extraordinary living experience. To passers-by, it cannot be distinguished from any other house on the van Merlenstraat.

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: roof plan

Project: house of Joyce & Jeroen
Location: The Hague, the Netherlands
Client: Joyce & Jeroen
Project type: residence renovation
Area: 225 m² building
Cost: € 245.000 including VAT

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: 3D sectional diagram

Joyce and Jeroen renovation by Personal Architecture

Above: 3D concept diagram

The post Joyce & Jeroen House renovation
by Personal Architecture
appeared first on Dezeen.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

This foyer for the Royal Institute of Engineers in The Hague by Dutch practice AAArchitects has a large door which folds up from the glass facade to create a porch.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Constructed from a gridded steel frame and clad in silicone-seamed glass panels, the KIVI NIRIA foyer increases in height and width from one side to another, linking together the previously completed auditorium and another adjacent building.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Internallly, a long linear bar with a wooden top provides a surface and storage space.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Photography is by Rob ‘t Hart Fotografie

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

More Dutch architecture stories on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


Foyer
The Hague, The Netherlands

Supplementary to the design of the adjacent auditorium for the Royal Institute of Engineers in The Hague, AAArchitects has been asked to add a foyer to the existing passageway.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Because of this double role in function as a passageway and a foyer, we have chosen to limit the physical separation to a minimum and subtly indicate it with a jump between the roof and ceiling levels.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

The passageway runs from the beginning to the end straight and preserves its width, whereas the foyer part broadens towards the auditorium where the busiest junction will be.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

By choosing not to separate the space and avoid any columns between the two spaces, both parts together can be used as one space for the biggest crowds.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

The grid of the existing historical pawn has been persevered in the new facade and fans to the other building.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

The complete new facade exists on the outside only of glass and silicone seams, which are supported on the inside by a steel frame of T-profiles.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

The profiles are attached with an invisibly mechanical affirmation to the glass. To intensify the relation with the adjacent garden a big door is created. It is opened with hydraulic cylinders and creates a large porch without disturbing the openness of the facade by opening doors. The large opening part of the facade has a steel Construction of T-profiles that has been made rigid by 40 glued glass plates. Without the seemingly weak looking glass the door would simply collapse.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

The existing marble of the floor is reused and the same wengé wood of the adjacent auditorium is used to complete the floor finishing to the new outlines of the foyer. The two ceiling levels are materialised in coloured polyester panels and painted rock panel. The polyester panels designed in cooperation with artist Vincent de Rijk hang in a grid that spreads out itself according to the width of the hallway. In this ceiling a line of light is created behind a transparent strip of panels.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

To reduce costs and keep the façade free from visible installations, the existing heaters were reused and integrated inside a new wall. The wall is made out of long continuous wooden strips through which the hot air of the heaters can flow into the foyer, and glasses and plates can be laid aside. To make sure the climate stays comfortable during hot summer days, the façade is covered with grey solar control glass.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

For the foyer AAArchitects has designed a big linear bar made out of PU coated steel. The bar which has a sufficient amount of storage space is covered with a wengé wooden top which is movable and covers a sink which can be used when it is pushed open. The doors are designed without handles in black mdf and can be opened electrically all at once by one push on the button.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Click above for larger image

Client: KIVI NIRIA
Architect & Interior: AAArchitects
Design team: Amer Alhassan, Wim Smits, Florence Paul, Luigi Depperu, Matteo Frongia.

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Click above for larger image

Construction: ABT
Ceiling: Atlier de Rijk
Installations: ABT
Contractor: DB Bouw
Furniture: Van Eijk meubel – interieurbouw

KIVI NIRIA Foyer by AAArchitects

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

KIVI NIRIA auditorium
by AAArchitects
H House in Maastricht
by Wiel Arets Architects
Grotto
by Callum Morton

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