Dominique Perrault’s DC Tower 1 now Austria’s tallest building

French firm Dominique Perrault Architecture has completed a 220-metre skyscraper with a folded glass facade in Vienna, which has now become Austria’s tallest building.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

DC Tower 1 was created by Dominique Perrault Architecture for a site on the eastern bank of the Danube, where it will be joined in 2016 by a smaller facing tower with a facade that will appear to mirror its undulating surface.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Rendered image of DC Tower 1 and the proposed DC Tower 2

The 58-storey tower containing offices, apartments, a hotel and a top-floor sky bar rises above a public plaza in the Austrian capital’s developing Donau City district.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

When the second tower is constructed it will be angled slightly so the space between the uneven facades of the two buildings will frame views of the city from the river.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

“The towers function as two pieces of a gigantic monolith that seems to have split into two unequal halves, which then open to create an arch with undulating and shimmering facades that bring the newly created public space to life in the void created there,” said Dominique Perrault.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

In contrast with the slick, straight-sided walls on three sides of the tower, the faceted facade creates a shifting pattern of light and shadow that animates the surface and lends it a rippling quality.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

“The visual qualities of the folded facade create a new way to read the skyline of Donau City, its undulations signalling the entry point of this new polarity,” said Perrault. “The folds contrast with the no-nonsense rigour of the other three facades, creating a tension that electrifies the public space at the tower’s base.”

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

At the rear of the tower, a staircase leads from an access road to a long building that acts as a publicly accessible entrance and drop-off area.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

A series of square metal canopies arranged around the building’s other elevations create a sheltered route across the plaza towards the entrance on the front facade.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

The interior was designed to have a raw, monumental quality, with structural elements including concrete columns and bracing beams left exposed.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Materials including metal and stone are used throughout the lobbies and circulation areas to enhance the building’s robust aesthetic.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Walls and ceilings are covered in glossy black panels that echo the slick reflective surface of the facade, while simple fluorescent tube lighting adds a suitably industrial detail.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Photography is by Michael Nagl, unless stated otherwise.

Here’s a project description from Dominique Perrault:


DC Tower 1

When an architect delivers a building it is always an extremely emotional moment, marked by the end of a long process of mediation, from absolute potentiality of early sketches to fine tuning in situ of final details. An actor, for a time, in the endless development of territories, the architect exits the scene. He hands over the controls to those he has been working for. This is the moment when architecture transitions from the intellectual, conceptual state to the fundamentally physical and real.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

In Vienna, these feelings are magnified by the iconic character and extreme visibility of the DC Tower 1, but also by the history that binds me to the project. One beginning twelve years ago, in 2002, when WED held an international competition for the development of the last remaining section of Donau City, and a history which continues to be written.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

From the start the project offered a site with incredible potential: an open terrain, facing Imperial Vienna, embedded in the geography of the Danube, lying on a plateau on the river’s eastern bank, like a bridgehead to two Viennas. But the site was not virgin territory as several previous projects had been conceived for it. So there was a conceptual “already there”, a thoroughly fascinating virtuality.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Photograph by Walter J.Sieberer

Very early on, what kindled my interest most in this site was the bridgehead with the rest of the Donau City district, with the river banks but also the conditions for breathing life into a public space on an esplanade. We took advantage of this commission to design a genuine entry gate to Donau City. Reversing objectives for earlier development projects envisaged here, WED specifications called for a decidedly mixed-use program, an indispensable condition for germinating the contemporary urban vibration we were proposing to create in and around the towers.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Photograph by Walter J.Sieberer

The towers function as two pieces of a gigantic monolith that seems to have split into two unequal halves, which then open to create an arch with undulating and shimmering façades that bring the newly created public space to life in the void created there. Dancing on their platform, the towers are slightly oriented toward the river to open a dialogue with the rest of the city, turning their backs on no one, neither the historic nor the new Vienna.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Today, the first of the two towers is up and the result is quite amazing, thanks notably to the invaluable collaboration of the Hoffmann-Janz architecture office. The visual qualities of the folded façade create a new way to read the skyline of Donau City, its undulations signalling the entry point of this new polarity. The folds contrast with the no-nonsense rigour of the other three façades, creating a tension that electrifies the public space at the tower’s base.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

The façade’s folds give the tower a liquid, immaterial character, a malleability constantly adapting to the light, a reflection or an event. For interior spaces, on the other hand, with Gaëlle Lauriot-Prévost, the associate designer, we have tried to make the building very physical and present. The structure is not hidden, does not evade the eye. The exposed concrete framework is touchable. Stone and metal used in lobbies and circulations contribute to the tower’s generous and reassuring physicality.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

We have tried to avoid a tendency in contemporary architectural production to hide the architect’s real work, of sewing, suturing the project and contextualising and anchoring it in the environment. Design emerges in a later phase. Towers floating above the ground are too severe, like architectural objects, objects in themselves. They must land, take root in the soil of cities, in places where their urban substance is found. The aim is to get the basic horizontality of the city and the public space to coincide with vertical trajectories.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

The work on the base and foundation of the DC Tower 1 was highly stimulating. Architectural arrangements determine the tower’s relationship to the ground. On the back façade, the public space rises from the level of the esplanade in a series of staggered steps to reach the ground reference plane. This structuring of topography launches the tower and creates a spatial interface accessible to all, making the occurrence of such a physical object both possible and acceptable.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

On the other three façades, metallic umbrellas gradually rise from the ground on the approach, softening the violence of the eruption and blending city and movement into the tower’s future. Important work on neighbourhood fringes remains to be done to reveal the geographic features of this urban landscape and take better advantage of the river bank.

Site plan of DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Site plan – click for larger image

With this first tower the city of Vienna has demonstrated that the punctual and controlled emergence of high-rises can participate in creating the city and produce contemporary, economical, high-energy performance mixed-use buildings adapted to metropolitan business requirements and lifestyles.

Detailed section of DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Section – click for larger image

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Viennese apartment with pretend skylights by Alex Graef

British architect Alex Graef has combined two art deco apartments in Vienna to create a home with clean white walls, restored oak floors and a row of artificial skylights (+ slideshow).

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

Alex Graef renovated the two nineteenth century apartments to create an occasional home for an art collector. The architect designed a series of bright spaces with large open walls and built-in shelves to create places for hanging paintings and displaying small sculptures.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

One side of the residence contains the bedroom, library and kitchen, while the other side accommodates the living room, dining room and study.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

A series of pre-Columbian sculptures are dotted throughout the apartment to tie the spaces together and are highlighted by new lighting fixtures.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

“A layer of directional spotlights highlight the sculptures, each of which is visible from another, and thereby directs the flow through the space,” Graef told Dezeen.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

More lighting sits within three slices in the ceiling above the kitchen, creating the effect of a row of skylights.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

“The artificial skylights and deep-recessed dimmable ceiling spots provide basic uniform light levels to the space,” added the architect.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

Original oak parquet floors were restored on one side of the apartment, while the other side features new terrazzo flooring.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

Sliding doors between rooms are upholstered in a textured white fabric.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

The bathroom is contained behind newly added partitions and features dark tiled walls that contrast with the bright white of the rest of the residence.

Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef

Photography is by Michael Nagl.

Here’s a project description from the architect:


Beletage Apartment in Vienna

London architect Alex Graef remodelled and furnished a large apartment in a 19th century building in Vienna for a non-resident client.

A deep plan, created by combining two adjacent apartments, was unlocked by demolishing all central partitions and inserting a series of gently rotated volumes containing bathrooms and ancillary spaces. An existing collection of pre-columbian miniature sculptures was used as a narrative device and installed as permanent client to host their often absent occupiers.

This created fictional views and axial relationships, which helped to determine and communicate a geometry that meets and transports often sparse but ever changing daylight deep into a large central space.

Floor plans of Beletage Apartment in Vienna by Alex Graef
Floor and ceiling plan – click for larger image

There it is met by a layered system of artificial lighting which looks to augment, complement and play, starting with a dominant central artificial skylight and using brightly lit wall faces and suspended lighting objects to mark moments and give structure to an otherwise free flowing spatial sequence.

The subtlety of light colour and intensity is enhanced by white as the dominant for all visible surfaces, helped by an interplay of different textures, reflections and refractions. Gaps between hard white volumes are filled by soft upholstered, white textured sliding doors, while inside surfaces of bathrooms and visible furniture use dark heavy materials and moments of bright colour.

Through large openings to an outer rim of existing rooms which are restored with their original wooden floors and traditional stucco, colour enters the white central space and further adds to its complexity and ever changing atmosphere.

Architects: Alex Graef Associated Architects Ltd (Alex Graef, Marek Dziubas, Christoph Eppacher, Natascha Madeiski, Heidi Lee, Thomas Dunning)
Consultant Engineers: Hollinsky and Partners, Vienna

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skylights by Alex Graef
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Test Drive: Rolls-Royce Wraith: The most driver-focused car Rolls-Royce has ever built

Test Drive: Rolls-Royce Wraith


Our first look at the Wraith came last winter, and left us wanting to get behind the wheel. We recently had the chance to spend a day with it in and around Vienna, where we…

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Bathing Hut by Share Architects

This small white building on the edge of the Danube River in Vienna was designed by Austrian studio Share Architects for use as a holiday home or party venue.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

Share Architects positioned the Bathing Hut at the water’s edge, creating a two-storey space with a kitchen and living area on the lower level and a sleeping deck above with an entrance leading out to the street.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

“The Bathing Hut was conceived as a micro villa with full amenities and is a private chill-out oasis within an otherwise dense urban context,” said the architects.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

“It is easily reachable from Vienna so you can even use it in the summertime during lunch breaks or as an alternative residence, and otherwise as a weekend retreat and for parties on the lake,” they added.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

Constructed from reinforced concrete, the building is clad with white aluminium composite panels on the facade and roof. One edge appears to have been sliced away, leaving a row of angled windows that face up towards the sky.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

The all-white kitchen features a floating counter that can be used for preparing food or dining.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

Sliding doors lead out onto a wooden deck and jetty, offering a mooring point for boats.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

A wooden staircase runs alongs the side of the house and leads directly from the street to the river.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects

Other waterside residences we’ve featured include a small wooden house overlooking the ocean in Scotland and a yacht house containing four apartments on the Crimean coastline.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects
Site plan – click for larger image

See more holiday homes »
See more Austrian architecture »

Photography is by Kurt Kuball.

Here’s a short description from the architects:


Bathing Hut

The bathing hut was conceived as a micro villa with full amenities. Located on the waterfront of the Old Danube, but still in the centre of Vienna (Austria), it is a private chill-out oasis within an otherwise dense urban context.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects
Section – click for larger image

Coming from the street, the property is accessed through a large sliding gate that leads to the top terrace of the very compact arrangement. An open-air staircase along the side facade takes the visitor 3 meters below.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects
South elevation – click for larger image

On this level the main terrace open to the Old Danube, and the double-height, main living room can seamlessly connect to the outdoor space through a sliding facade.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects
East elevation – click for larger image

Inside, a suspended gallery offering wonderful views over the water is used as a sleeping deck. Under the gallery there is place for the bathroom and the adjacent open kitchen.

Bathing Hut by Share Architects
West elevation – click for larger image

In the rear of the house under the overlying top terrace place was found for a storage. A wooden floating deck, illuminated at night, offers the possibility of a boat mooring.

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Share Architects
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Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Here are the first photographs of Zaha Hadid’s Library and Learning Centre at the Vienna University of Economics and Business, which opened last week in the city’s second district.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The library and learning centre is one of seven buildings that make up a new campus at the Vienna University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien), designed to accommodate 24,000 students and 1800 staff.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The most distinctive feature of Zaha Hadid’s 28,000-square-metre building is a large black volume that is perched over the roof and cantilevers out across a public square at the main entrance.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

This structure houses the main library, as well as function rooms and an elevated cafe, and is clad externally in Rieder glass fibre-reinforced concrete panels.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

To contrast, the rest of the building is finished in white panels and accommodates the non-public areas, including classrooms, an auditorium, workspaces and offices.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The facade is inclined at an angle of 35 degrees, allowing floorplates to increase in size towards the top of the building.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects won a competition to design the library and learning centre in 2008. We recently featured an animation by London visualisation firm Neutral giving a tour of the building.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The architect has also recently completed the Innovation Tower at the Polytechnic University in Hong Kong and is finishing off an undulating cultural centre in Azerbaijan.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

See all our stories about Zaha Hadid »
See more stories about architecture for education »

Photography is courtesy of Rieder.

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by Zaha Hadid Architects
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Movie: Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid‘s Library and Learning Centre at the Vienna University of Economics and Business opens today and this animation by London visualisation firm Neutral gives a tour of the building.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Located in Vienna’s second district, the Vienna University of Economics and Business (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien) is the largest University focusing on business and economics in Europe, and the new site will accommodate 23,000 students and 1,500 staff.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Open 24 hours a day, the Library and Learning Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects is one of seven buildings that make up the new campus.

The 28,000-square-metre building houses a library, auditorium, workspaces, classrooms, offices, learning support services, book shop, event spaces and cafe.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

The animation by Neutral first shows how the volumes of the design are generated, then begins a tour through the spaces.

“The straight lines of the building’s exterior separate as they move inward, becoming curvilinear and fluid to generate a free-formed interior canyon that serves as the central public plaza of the centre,” said the architects.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

“All the other facilities are housed within a since column that also divides, becoming two separate ribbons that wind around each other to enclose this glazed gathering space.”

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

“Searching for a balance between abstract, conceptual narrative and much-expected photorealism, we blend soundscapes with evocative camera movements and traces of inhabitation – revealing time-based architectural design ideas which otherwise wouldn’t be apparent,” Christian Grou of Neutral told Dezeen.

Library and Learning Centre in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects won the competition to design the building in 2008 – read more in our earlier story.

We’ve also recently published photos of Zaha Hadid’s Innovation Tower at the Polytechnic University in Hong Kong, nearing completion, and the firm’s extension to the Serpentine Gallery in London.

See all our stories about Zaha Hadid »
See all our stories about architecture for education »

Still visualisations are by Vectorvision.

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in Vienna by Zaha Hadid Architects
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Vienna Design Week: Bertille & Mathieu + Lobmeyr: The French-Swiss duo reinvents an iconic company’s products in a sweet collaboration

Vienna Design Week: Bertille & Mathieu + Lobmeyr


by Adam Štěch As part of Vienna Design Week—which concludes this Saturday, 5 October—French-Swiss designers Bertille Laguet and Mathieu Rohrer (Bertille & Mathieu) are currently collaborating with iconic glassware…

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Super Mari’ by Lukas Galehr

The entire contents of this shop and cafe in Vienna can be hidden away behind a grid of white ceramic tiles.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

Designed by Lukas Galehr of architecture collective MadameMohr, the Super Mari’ shop combines an Italian food store with a coffee shop and late-night bar, so its contents change depending on the time of day.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

“The client asked for a space which was flexible and able to transform from a simple bar to a mini-market without much effort,” the architect told Dezeen.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

Products ranging from pasta to washing powder are displayed within recesses in the tiled white walls, but can be screened behind panels that fold or slide across in front. These panels are also covered with tiles, disguising the locations of the display areas.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

“In the closing hours most often the entire interior is closed so that only the tiles are visible, which gives the impression of an emptied-out swimming pool or a butcher’s shop,” said Galehr.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

Paper shopping bags are patterned with the same grid and even the cover for the coffee machine looks like a tile-clad block.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

Black tiles cover the floor, contrasting with the white walls, while monochrome pendant lights hang down from the high ceiling.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

Lukas Galehr also recently completed a pizzeria with a spinning oven shaped like a giant disco ball.

Super Mari' by Lukas Galehr

Other interesting interiors from Vienna include a bar with a faceted ceiling of upside-down peaks and an office with a slide for Microsoft.

See more architecture and interiors in Vienna »
See more shops on Dezeen »

Photography is by Jorit Aust.

Here’s some text written by Lukas Galehr:


Super Mari’

Super Mari’ is a very small Italian Café-Bar-Market in the heart of Vienna’s second district, designed by the young architects collaborative MadameMohr.

The client asked for a space which was flexible being able to transform for instance from a simple bar to a mini-market without much effort. A second request was that there should not be any fancy designer furniture nor any modern patterns or materials which would give the impression of something new and stylish.

The result is a space completely covered in black and white 10x10cm glazed tiles. All furniture are built in closets with intricate swivel mechanisms that allow the owner to change the line of goods in just seconds. All the appliances and bar utensils hide behind rotary-slide doors which are also covered with tiles on the outside.

In the early hours of the day when people are on their way to work they drop by just for a quick coffee and a Cornetto and a spremuta, while in the afternoon the range of goods expands from coffee beans to pasta and even washing powder. Most products are imported from Italy such as passalacqua coffee and pasta from vero lucano. In the late afternoon and evening the space transforms again to the bar where people have a quick aperitivo before they head to one of the numerous nearby restaurants. Many come back after dinner since the true espresso only tastes right at the bar.

In the closing hours most often the entire interior is closed so only the tiles are visible which gives the impression of an emptied out swimming pool or a butcher’s shop. Only insiders and regulars are not irritated by the always changing configurations of the shelves.

Location: Vienna, Austria
Client: Maria Fuchs
Space: 33m²

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Lukas Galehr
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Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

A spinning oven shaped like a giant disco ball is the centrepiece of this pizzeria in Vienna by Austrian architect Lukas Galehr (+ slideshow).

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Covered in hundreds of tiny mirrored tiles, the spherical pizza oven is positioned amidst the dining area and is anchored to a central chimney that allows it pivot from its centre.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

The restaurant lights are dimmed for the evenings and various coloured spotlights are directed onto the oven, causing scores of pink, green and blue dots to flood across the white walls and ceilings.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Named Disco Volante, which loosely translates as flying disc, the restaurant is otherwise modelled on an authentic Napoli pizzeria with a vaulted ceiling, smooth tiled floors and clean white walls.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Black mosaic tiles lines the walls of the pizza-making area and also cover the floor surrounding the service counter and bar.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Simple wooden chairs and benches provide rows of seating, giving most diners a clear view of the glittering central feature.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Lukas Galehr is a member of design collective MadameMohr, which includes five architects and one industrial designer.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Other pizzerias to feature on Dezeen include one surrounded by tin cans and one modelled on an Italian courtyard.

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

See more pizzerias on Dezeen »
See more restaurant interiors »

Disco Volante by Lukas Galehr

Here’s a short movie showing the spinning oven in action:

Photography is by Lukas Schaller.

Here’s a project description from the architect:


Disco Volante

The recently opened Pizzeria is the second of its kind hosted by Maria Fuchs, a vanguard in the recent “genuine pizza” hype in Vienna. The name “Disco Volante” brings back memories of the James Bond villain Emilio Largo’s escape vessel. Also a famous car designed in the early 50ies carried this name (there has recently been a relaunch by Alfa Romeo). But in fact does the name of the pizzeria simply refer to its original meaning “flying disc”.

According to the clients wish the restaurant should not only carry the atmosphere of a southern Italian pizzeria but also transport the lightness of the “Italo-Disco” era of the 1970s and 80s.

The heart of every pizzeria is the wood fired oven which in this case is a giant disco ball with a rotating mechanism. After the dough is run out the Pizzaioli start the engine and the oven begins to slowly turn with about 1 revolution per minute.

In charge of the design as well for most of the production of the oven was Vienna based madamemohr, a young architects and designers collaborative. Their goal is not to just design but also to fabricate where possible. In this case, the outer shell of the oven which is made from heat resistant concrete, was produced utilizing CNC-milling technology to build the spherical formwork.

The mechanism allowing the oven to rotate is hidden underneath the baking surface where the heat does not damage sensitive parts. The shell is covered with approximately 7500 special cut mirror tiles which were glued on site.

The ceiling of the former grocery store revealed an extra meter of height when removed. This additional space contributes to the canteen like feeling known from the overcrowded places in Naples drowned in neon light. Adding up to this harsh and rather uncomfortable environment are the former church benches as well as the chairs, typically found in Vienna’s city departments and the tables only leaving space for a pizza and a beverage each. These attributes might sound unusual for a restaurant but are key elements of the success of “Disco Volante”.

The waiters and waitresses are all wearing special designed overalls by fashion designer Milena Heussler & Luciano Raimondi and recall a mechanics outfit.

Responsible for the design of the Neon Sign as well as all print media are grafisches Büro, Vienna.

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Lukas Galehr
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House S Architecture

Le studio Atelier Heiss Architects a réadapté cette maison à Vienne en gardant la façade d’origine mais en créant en parallèle un intérieur et un jardin résolument moderne, amplifiant ainsi le contraste entre les deux types d’architecture. Un très beau projet de rénovation à découvrir en images dans la suite.

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