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. Workshop Building Landscheide in Schönengrund, Switzerland by kitDecember 13th, 2018 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: kit The Landscheide workshop in Wald-Schoenengrund offers structured daytime workspaces to people with disabilities. For this purpose, the new building by kit | architects provides bright studio spaces, with the clever layout ensuring a protected environment that fosters independent work. The simple building structure offers a variety of spatial experiences and can be used flexibly. The walls have been deliberately left rough, and the wood and concrete ceilings underline the workshop character, while the inclusion of the surrounding nature creates a calm and relaxing atmosphere. In 2013, kit | architects won the Landscheide Association’s selective competition and are now happy to announce that the workshop building has been completed and occupied.
Site-Specific Situation The new building complements the ensemble of the existing residential facility Landscheide. The compact cube adopts the alignment of the surrounding buildings and blends into the slope between the main street and the cultural landscape. A wide canopy characterises and protects the entrance area, while at the same time offering the possibility of extending the wood workshop into the outside space during good weather. The building’s setting and the careful modulation of the surrounding topography create outdoor spaces with different qualities: a forecourt, a garden and the outdoor seating area of the coffee shop. The entire property was further turned into an orchard with newly planted, loosely spaced apple and cherry trees. Building Due to its hillside location, the lower floor opens directly onto the forecourt. The actual ground floor comprises the common rooms and the administrative office, and the three upper floors the additional workspaces. These upper rooms are divided by four u-shaped brackets arranged around a central access area, thus creating two different types of rooms: corner rooms and niche rooms. The corner rooms, which open towards the staircase, serve the main purpose of the building, whereas the niche rooms can be used as retreat spaces, offices and storage rooms. In addition, the rooms are connected along the façade, allowing informal access. Rooms People with very different impairments work in the workshop, and the room structure is tailored to their needs. Providing shielded retreat and break spaces was important. In addition, the niche rooms contain the offices of the supervisors, from which the workshops can be discreetly monitored, enabling independent work that enhances self-esteem. The inclusion of the surrounding nature through generous ribbon windows creates a bright and quiet atmosphere, and the clear arrangement of the rooms contributes to easy orientation in the building. Façade and Structural Concept The outside of the building features an exposed concrete façade with encircling parapet strips and slender columns. The exposed concrete was formed with OSB panels and thus has a lively structure. The brown glazing takes on the colour of the surrounding dark wooden houses. The façade, together with the internal reinforced concrete walls of the four u-shaped brackets, forms the load-bearing system. Contact kit
Tags: Schönengrund, Switzerland |