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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.

Tea House on bunker in Vreeland, The Netherlands by UNStudio

 
January 30th, 2020 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: UNStudio

The project involves the reprogramming of a historical and derelict building through renovation and addition. The original bunker is part of an intricate water management system that enabled the inundation of land in case of attack situated in a classic, Dutch polder landscape.

Image Courtesy © UNStudio

  • Architects: UNStudio
  • Project: Tea House on bunker
  • Location: Vreeland, The Netherlands
  • Design: UNStudio, Amsterdam, Ben van Berkel, Gerard Loozekoot met René Wysk, Job Mouwen en Marcel Buis, Thomas de Vries, Holger Hoffmann, Eric den Eerzamen, Joakim Kaminsky, Peter Irmscher, Daniel Kalani, Anika Voigt, Eric Coppolse, Stephan Albrecht
  • Project management: Rietmeyer, Almere Ronald Cos, Geert Wilmink
  • Constructural engineer: ABT, Velp, Rob Nijsse
  • Construction: ABT, Velp, Rob Nijsse, Stephan Toonen
  • Installation: ABT, Velp, Onno Janse
  • Construction physics: ABT, Velp, Mark van Veghel

Image Courtesy © UNStudio

  • Gross floor surface: 80 m²
  • Volume: 450 m3
  • Building site: 54 m²
  • Client: Cor van Zadelhoff

Stables and polo fields now surround the building and the new addition is intended as a large space with facilities to support a meeting space or business retreat.  The existing 1936 bunker remains intact except of a portion of the concrete roof where the new structure connects whilst the new addition is like an umbrella, an addition that could be removed and does not damage or permanently influence the historic structure. The metallic addition appears to have grown out of the still visible concrete facades of the bunker, cantilevering out towards the sports fields with its large single window. In fact the space is designed with steel structures within its two main walls which act as one story high beams. These beams are balanced off center on two columns that land directly in front of the existing bunker. Stability is achieved by using the massive concrete shell of the bunker as a counterweight, offsetting the forces of the cantilevering extension by connecting it with the two beams.

The bunker houses all the new installations and public circulation restricted to the new addition. Entrance into the building is accessed between the existing bunker’s outer façade, which remains uncovered, and the new façade cladding of the addition.

Image Courtesy © UNStudio

Image Courtesy © UNStudio

Image Courtesy © UNStudio

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Categories: Building, Historic Site, Renovation




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