Youth Centre by Cornelius + Vöge

This bright red youth centre in Denmark by architects Cornelius + Vöge is coloured to match the fishing cabins of the surrounding village (+ slideshow).

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

The architects renovated and extended an existing building, cladding the roof and every wall in red-painted panels of steel and timber.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

“The colour of the building is an important issue,” architect Dan Cornelius told Dezeen. “The traditional old fisherman’s cabins are one of the most characteristic elements of the village.”

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

The walls of the two-storey building turn inward at the junction between the original structure and the extension, lining the edge of an outdoor play area.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

A external staircase climbs down from the first floor to meet this play area, creating a space that the architects describe as a “small stage”.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

A double-height sports hall occupies one end of the building and features a protruding corner window where children can work or play in small groups.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

We’ve featured a few all-red buildings on Dezeen, including a psychiatric centre in Spain and a chocolate museum in BrazilSee all our stories about red buildings »

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Photography is by Adam Mørk.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Youth Centre, Roskilde, DK, 2012

The project is a conversion and extension of an existing building. The main approach is to make a new interpretation of the red barn buildings and fishermen cabins of the old part of the village where the building is located. The extension to the old building starts where the building takes a turn making a more intimate feeling surrounding the outdoor play areas.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

The building is located between an old village and a seventies development, so in order to underline a regional identity to the building it was coloured all red. The red colour follows the tradition of the old fishermen cabins of the village. The roof has the same colour as the facades to make the shape of the building more precise and simple underlining the basic shape of the building.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

First floor plan – click above for larger image

The building is renovated into a low energy building, covered with new facade materials and reorganized into a more open, playful and modern building. New covered areas, balconies and stairs integrates more intimate corners and living areas both outside and inside.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Section one – click for larger image

The surrounding green areas are more integrated and daylight optimised. The extension includes a flexible multi purpose hall for concerts, theatre, playing and sports activities including an integrated climbing wall.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

Section two – click above for larger image

Several façade elements breaks the basic shape of the building into a smaller scale: a stair functions as a small stage area, covered entrances and the corner window which cantilevers from the building and creates a more intimate living space for the children to sit in smaller groups – a private space being a part of the interior and exterior at the same time.

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

End elevation one – click above for larger image

Type: Transformation, renovation
Team: E. Troelsgaard engineers
Area: 600 m2
Client: Roskilde Municipality

Youth Centre Roskilde by Cornelius + Vöge

End elevation two – click above for larger image

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Cornelius + Vöge
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Fai Fah by Spark

Fai Fah by Spark

Architects Spark have added a stairwell resembling a giant wedge of Swiss cheese onto two Bangkok shophouses they’ve converted into a youth centre.

Fai Fah by Spark

Commissioned by Thai bank TMB, the Fai Fah centre provides the venue for a programme of workshops and classes that encourage children and teenagers to take part in creative activities.

Fai Fah by Spark

Above: photograph is by TMB

During the design process the architects held design workshops with local children, who had the initial ideas for the steel lattice that covers the facades of the two original shophouses.

Fai Fah by Spark

Above: photograph is by Spark

“Spark’s workshops with the Fai-Fah children were inspiring,” explained TMB Bank’s Paradai Theerathada. ”They gave the children a great sense of accomplishment from being involved in the design process for such a large-scale, tangible project.”

Fai Fah by Spark

The children also chose a palette of colours to mark each of the building’s six storeys, including the bright yellow that features in the event space and mezzanine gallery at the base of the building.

Fai Fah by Spark

Other rooms include a library, an art studio, a pottery classroom and a dance studio.

Fai Fah by Spark

Above: photograph is by Spark

A garden is located on the roof, where the L-shaped stair tower wraps around to create a storage room.

Fai Fah by Spark

Above: photograph is by TMB

Long, narrow shophouses are a typical building typology in Southeast Asia, and we also recently featured one converted into a residence with a swimming pool inside.

Fai Fah by Spark

See all our stories about shophouses »

Fai Fah by Spark

Photography is by Lin Ho, apart from where otherwise stated.

Fai Fah by Spark

Here’s a project description from Fai-Fah:


FAI-FAH

Fai-Fah, which means “light energy”, is a corporate social responsibility (CSR) programme initiated in April 2010 by TMB Bank. The programme acts as a catalyst for change in Thai society through working with underprivileged children and teenagers in their community using the arts as a vehicle for self-development and creative thinking.

Fai Fah by Spark

In October 2010, Spark was invited to design Fai-Fah Prachautis, the refurbishment of two shop houses located in a residential district of Bangkok.

Fai Fah by Spark

The art and creative education programmes contained in the client’s brief have been distributed over five floors, and include: the multi-function “living room”, the art studio, a library, the gallery, the dance studio and a multi-purpose rooftop garden.

Fai Fah by Spark

The design was developed at interactive workshops with the Fai-Fah children and teenagers, volunteer arts staff, and members of TMB’s CSR team.

Fai Fah by Spark

Ideas generated during the workshop such as the façade screen and the interior colours were incorporated into the design, underlining the positive nature of the collaborative process and ownership of the concept amongst all of the project’s protagonists.

Fai Fah by Spark

Ground floor plan – click above for larger image

The five levels of the building are linked by a central feature staircase with each level defined by its own colour theme.

Fai Fah by Spark

First floor mezzanine plan – click above for larger image

Utilities and services are housed in a new inverted L- shaped structure, the “Utility Stick”, which is plugged into the rear of the building; it rises from the courtyard and bends to form a garden store at roof level.

Fai Fah by Spark

Second floor plan – click above for larger image

The existing shop house façade has been transformed by the application of a bespoke lattice screen and Fai-Fah logo, a statement that the building is different from its adjacent neighbours and announcing to the community that Fai-Fah has arrived.

Fai Fah by Spark

Third floor plan – click above for larger image

Location: Bangkok, Thailand

Fai Fah by Spark

Forth floor plan – click above for larger image

GFA (area above ground): 569 sqm
Project Completion: Quarter 1, 2012
Facilities: Event Space (Living Room), Gallery, Library, Art Studio, Dance Studio, Roof garden

Fai Fah by Spark

Roof  plan – click above for larger image

Architect: Spark
Design Director: Stephen Pimbley
Team: Wenhui Lim, Mark Mancenido, Suchon Pongsopitsin
Client: TMB Bank Public Company Limited
Client Team: Paradai Theerathada, Sakchai Sriwatthanapitikul, Nopawan Saengteerakij, Thatchakorn Prutnoppadol, Mallika Uswachoke, Radomdej Taksana, Aree Vesvijak, Jumpol Kwangosen, Saranyoo Nantanawanit, Siriporn Lerdapirangsi
Fai-Fah Kids: Master Thanakan Namunmong, Chisanu Kiatsuranayon, Sirinart Naksombhob, Kamolthat Sutat Na Ayudhya
Local Architect: 365COOP Company Limited

Fai Fah by Spark

Section – click above for larger image

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Lil/Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

JDS Architects have won a competition to design a youth centre for Lille, France.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

The Lil/Euralille Youth Centre will comprise a contorted triangular building, housing a youth hostel, a kindergarten and offices within its three corners.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

These three blocks will each feature cantilevered corners and are to surround a central triangular courtyard.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

This courtyard will slope up to a roof garden above the kindergarten and step onto decks above the youth hostel.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre by JDS Architects

This will be the first project in Lille by JDS Architects, who previously designed a cantilevered ski jump in Norwaysee all our stories about the firm here.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Here’s a little more information from the architects:


JDS Architects have just signed the contract to execute their first French project for the city of Lille.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Over the past twenty years Lille has become a European hub; a destination for business and congress, a great place to study and live and also a tourist destination.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

It is a city with a turbulent history of conquest and reconquest, a heritage as an important medieval city and later on enjoyed and sometimes suffered the title of Northern France industrial capital.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Our project emerges from the idea of creating an urban catalyst, accommodating three distinct programmes on a triangular site.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

By placing a program in each point of the triangle we offer maximum privacy while allowing them a closeness and continuity of space, organised around a garden, like a cloister of calm in the center of the city.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

The lifting of the mass of the programme at the corners illuminates and activates the adjacent public spaces and creates a continuity from outside to inside of the building.

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Project: youth hostel, kindergarten, office
Budget: 12.150.000 EUR

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Type: Invited Competition
Size: 6.980 m2

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Client: SAEM Euralille
Status: 1st Prize 2011

Lil Euralille Youth Centre By JDS Architects

Location: Lille, France
JDS Partner in Charge: Julien De Smedt

Lil/Euralille Youth Centre by JDS Architects

Project Leader: Renaud Pereira
Team: JDS, EGIS, Agence Franck Boutté Consultants, SL2EC

Lil/Euralille Youth Centre by JDS Architects


See also:

.

Casal de la Juventud
by CrystalZoo
Youth centre by
Mi5 Arquitectos
Factory by Marks
Barfield Architects

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by CrystalZoo

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Spanish studio CrystalZoo have renovated this former school in Novelda, Spain, to create a youth centre for the area. 

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Top photograph is by David Frutos

Called Casal de la Juventud de Novelda, the upper part of the building has been wrapped with a skin of polycarbonate panels, causing it to overhang the lower part.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

The architects have created a new plaza at the entrance of the building, featuring little grassy mounds and a zig-zag pattern on the paving that creeps up onto the wall of the centre.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

The windows are slightly recessed in the façade and highlighted in bright colours.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Photographs are by Rafael Galán unless otherwise stated.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

More youth centres on Dezeen »
More Spanish architecture on Dezeen »

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Above photograph is by David Frutos

The following information is from the architects:


Casal de la Juventud de Novelda

This building is placed in Novelda, a small town near Alicante (Spain).

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

It consists in a renovation of an old school building ant its yard to allow new public uses.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

This proposal is a work about the reuse of old buildings and their adaptation to contemporary needs.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

In this sense the Casal de la Juventud reinvents itself and establishes a dialogue between each stage of its evolution.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Above photograph is by David Frutos

Life opens up, in this case, creating a new wrapper able to equip the building and the plaza with new technologies and services.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Above photograph is by David Frutos

The plaza is raised as a hub of social activity in Novelda.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Above: existing building

This system consists in connecting paths that also define soft areas that can adapt and establish links with what is happening inside the building.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

Working with an old school offers the opportunity to have the yard, which is a valuable open space within the dense urban fabric.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

This courtyard is a place that complements and makes possible the use of this new building.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

Materiality and lighting are the way this proposal establishes new links and relationships between the building and the public space.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

We try to provide complete and sophisticated equipment to this building and its plaza, through the installation of a new structure that surrounds the old school, with its own program, and also the support for the new activities.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

This structure provides lighting, energy and information systems, that define the specific environments for all the different situations that may happen.

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image

Casal de la Juventud de Novelda by Crystalzoo

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Seu University of La Nucia by CrystalZooEducational Centre by Alejandro Muñoz MirandaResidential extension by dB_dubail begert architectes

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Italian studio Antonio Ravalli Architetti have converted an old factory in Migliarino, Italy, into a youth hostel where guests can stay in these tall fabric-covered pods.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The cylinders are enclosed with translucent fabric, secured by tension cables and sitting on a wooden base to provide a kind of indoor camping space.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The reception is located on the ground floor, with bedrooms, bathrooms and a large lobby area housed over the two upper floors.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Photographs are © Antonio Ravalli Architetti.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

More interiors on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


As a part of a program for the conversion of an old hemp factory into a new city center for the town of Migliarino, the project gains a youth hostel out of a 510 m2 portion of the building.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The site position is barycentric tothe touristic circuits which take place during the summer, thanks to the proximity of the Po River Delta Natural Park, but the project has to count on a reduced regional funding, 270.000 € including the furniture, and a doubtful management profitability.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Thus the management aspects, both with the energetic and economic saving, are the principal matters.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The hostel is imagined as a ‘passive machine’, in which natural air fluxes are conveyed in order to obtain climatic benefits, while the systems distribution and the morphological disposition of the rooms, conceived as to minimize the utilized elements and technologies, allow an elastic hosting capacity: the highest during the spring and the summer, or in case of special events, reduced to the essential during the low seasons.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

While the reception and the facilities are located on the ground floor, the second level presents a single big space with all the windows on just one side.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Four rooms for 2-3 persons each, bathrooms and a staircase are disposed on two levels on the other side.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

These compose a volume which, compact and well-defined, can be air-conditioned with traditional tools. In the main space instead, the air conditioning is based on passive ventilation, eased by the position of the windows on the north side and by two ventilation tower located on the roof.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The impossibility of this space to be divided in more units, due to the uniqueness of light and air provenance, suggests an alternative solution to the dormitory: like an indoor camping, autonomous cells are placed, enfolded in light wrapping.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Not just physically, but also climatically independent ‘rooms’: a punctual air-conditioning system permits to choose which ones to ‘turn on’. The entire system net is located under the inspectionable wood platform, which works as a connective tissue for the cells.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The difference in height marks the transition from the more intimate space of the ‘rooms’ to the common daily area. The movement of the platform perimeter creates occasions for sitting and relaxing, cosy niches in which to read or surf the net.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

The space remains fluid, though allowing a multiplicity of distinct uses, while its plasticity is enhanced by the monochromaticity of the introduced elements and furnitures.

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

project: MiNO, Migliarino’s new youth hostel
location: Migliarino, Ferrara, Italy
year: 2010

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

architects: Antonio Ravalli Architetti / Antonio Ravalli, Simone Pelliconi, Valentina Milani, Lorenzo Masini, Giuseppe Crispino

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

client: Comune di Migliarino (FE)
category: hostel

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

area: 510 m2
materials: wood, concrete, fabric

MiNO by Antonio Ravalli Architetti

Click for larger image


See also:

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Art Gallery Showroom by Antonio Ravalli ArchitettiTextile Shipping Containers by Overtreders WNagi by Eiri Ota and
Irene Gardpoit Chan

Factory by Marks Barfield Architects

Steven Chilton of London office Marks Barfield Architects has designed a factory-shaped youth centre for the site of the what was once the world’s largest car plant at Longbridge in Birmingham, UK. (more…)