ArchShowcase 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. Nieuwdok NDSM in Amsterdam, The Netherlands by Moke ArchitectenDecember 8th, 2016 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Moke Architecten The site of NDSM Nieuwdok site is a former ship dock area at the waterfront of Amsterdam Noord in the Netherlands. The area is currently largely derelict and used by early adapters, like Greenpeace, Red Bull and MTV. The remaining monumental industrial buildings allocate small creative businesses and workshops, while new bars and hip festivals indicate the potential attraction of the area. They are signs of what is about to happen, as in the coming years the area will be transformed into a diverse urban area, with housing, office space, hotels and the like, all with a staggering density. Surrounded by the IJ River and some remaining docks, the water has a strong impact on the site and provides beautiful views.
NDSM Nieuwdok houses the first school in the area and 380 studios for university students. Situated in close proximity of the last remaining ship dock, noise proved one of the key determining factors during the design process, as the noise level is too high for living to be allowed. Together with specialists architect Ludo Grooteman developed a double glass and aluminium façade. Each studio has both a thermal façade and an acoustic façade, the latter providing an exterior climate while reducing the noise level significantly. Thus all students have an extra bay window for relaxing or other activities. As all bay windows are rotated towards the waterfront it results in a rough, scaled façade. The school is allocated in the double storey plinth. With interior spaces of up to 5,6 meters height, we made the plinth spacious, while double concrete columns sandwich bay windows and give it a robust expression. Together with the brown-red facetted top the building obtains a sort of autonomy that suits the area well. It connects to the strong industrial monuments while having its own autonomous expression. While the building shape on street side is orthogonal and simple, the courtyard is terraced and more complex. The terrace on ground floor functions as exterior space for the students of the school, who can reach the second terrace via a large staircase. The top terrace is the exterior space dedicated to the studios. The wooden floor, benches and tables and the corten steel planters give it a soft and more intimate atmosphere, emphasised by the ship building prints on the glass cladding. At the interior each floor has a different colour. The corridors widen at the circulation cores. The foyer is made of stone tiles, steel and concrete, with bright orange mailboxes. About the architect: Ludo Grooteman is partner of Moke Architecten, a relatively young Amsterdam based architectural firm. Together with his business partner Gianni Cito he has been educated at the Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam and the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London, where they obtained their love for research and architectural experiment. Moke Architecten has a team of 11 architects. It focuses on architecture and urban planning projects. It designs multiple projects in the Netherlands and abroad, of which many large housing projects, schools and retail. Their projects are regularly awarded. Contact Moke Architecten
Tags: Amsterdam, The Netherlands Categories: Institute, Mixed use, School, Student Center, Studio |