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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

NS Stations in Netherlands by NL Architects

 
July 3rd, 2013 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: NL Architects

The Katreinetoren in Utrecht is the home base of NS Stations, the department of the Railway (NS) that develops and services railway stations in the Netherlands. The 15 stories 55m high tower is built right on top of Utrecht Centraal, the biggest railway station in the Netherlands. The entrance is positioned conveniently in the Central Hall!

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

  • Architects: NL Architects
  • Project: NS Stations
  • Location: Netherlands
  • NS Stations: Office interior revamp, Utrecht 2011, competition 1st prize Completion: March 2013
  • Client: NS Stations / Servex
  • NL Architect: Pieter Bannenberg, Walter van Dijk, Kamiel Klaasse
  • Competition Team: Kirsten Hüsig, Babara Luns, Sarah Möller, Gen Yamamoto with Lea Olssen, Guilia Pastore, Ana Gavilanes Vallincello
  • Team: Babara Luns, Kirsten Hüsig, Bobby de Graaf, Sarah Möller with Mindaugas Glodenis, Else Ferf Jentings, Milda Naujalyte, Aude Robert

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

  • Project management: Compact building + design
  • Contractor: Groenendijk PGN Bouw
  • Installations: Cofely
  • Acoustics and Fire Safety: DGMR
  • Structural Engineer: Arcadis
  • Light ‘kookschool’: Egbert Keen
  • Cabinet Maker ‘Thick Walls’: Soons interieurbouw
  • Furniture: OFFICEDOCK projectinrichters
  • Size: 7000m2, nine floors

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

The width of the building is based on the dimensions of the railway tracks below. The interior is dominated by this concrete structure: the elevator core and structural beams remain in sight. A reconstruction took place in 1999 when the Brutalist mid-seventies building was wrapped in a glass skin.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

The current floor plan consists of typical cellular offices along the facade and an oversized hallway in the center. The basic idea is to introduce a series of perpendicular walls that will organize the space. By ‘inflating’ these partitioning walls they can become storage spaces.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

The shelves can absorb most of the clutter that normally spreads trough the office, such as wardrobes, bookshelves, flip boards, archive, bulletin boards. And sometimes even the stairs. The Thick Walls™ will clean up the space. The Thick Walls™ can take different shapes to introduce specific functionalities and atmospheres.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

The open plan with the Thick Walls™ divides the space in several clusters of different sizes. As opposed to a regular layout with cells linked to a corridor, a continuous, flowing space is created. Traffic space is eliminated: gross becomes net!

The main asset of this system is increased connectivity; instead of a workforce relatively isolated in cells, here interaction will come natural.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

The perpendicular Wall Unit explores the spatial potential of the building; an extensive ‘field’ condition is created while keeping a sense of compactness and intimacy. In the near future NS Stations plans to introduce the so-called flex-work system which means no more fixed workstations but a range of specific working environments to choose from. The proposed layout will be able to accommodate this intricate workflow, but for the time being most of the clusters will be organized as fixed working stations.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

A working station consists of an ergonomic office chair and a table that is individually adjustable in height. With this unit an endless number of configurations is possible. The dividing Wall Units can be placed in different ‘densities’ to create fitting floor plans for the various departments.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

A series of workshops with the future users will be organized to find a specific disposition for each floor. The 9 levels of 700me each will be arranged according to the same principle but all will be configured slightly different.

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Each floor will be introduced by a ‘special’: a singular piece of furniture located at the elevator core that represents the different departments. This ‘conversation piece’ is a kind of welcoming gesture: perhaps a logo-shaped bench, a swinging multifunctional lounge chair, a 2 story high candy machine, a sculptural reading table spelling NS,  a Happy Hour clock maybe…

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Image Courtesy © NL Architects

Tags:

Category: Station




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