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. Petrol Ofisi Headquarters in Istanbul, Turkey by lagranja designFebruary 24th, 2020 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: lagranja design Petrol Ofisi, leading fuel distribution company in Turkey, relied on Lagranja Design for the design of their new headquarters in Istanbul, placed in a mixed-use complex in the Asian side of the Bosphorus. Lagranja Design had many factors to consider; namely timelessness, well-being for the company’s employees, and optimal organization of over 10,000 square meters of office space.
The new HQ is situated Emaar AVM; a mega, mixed-used complex on the Asian side of the Bosporus. An initial study on the scale of ‘internal urbanism’ was undertaken by the studio in order to optimize internal traffic flows and organize the different departments over three floors in a fluid and dynamic way. Main outcomes of this phase included a cluster of meeting rooms on each floor, along with a central patio for the internal stairs, which promote pedestrian traffic and minimize dependence on elevators. Visually, the driving force behind the project is layering, a reference to the geological nature of the oil industry. Stonewalls, tectonic plates and stratification were the visual cues for the project, executed in natural and manmade materials with a ‘sexy’ sensibility and color scheme that draws from the murky, mysterious palate of the earth sciences. Each of the three levels of the project has been rendered a different tone, from green to petrol blue and red, the company’s corporate color. Red has also been used in a wide range of furniture and details, legs of worktables, armchairs in the cafeteria, and the lining of the 16 elevators – providing striking aesthetic unison. As is a feature of all Lagranja Design projects, custom made elements play a major part. Carpet and wallpaper – which was used as an ‘external skin’ in the modular bathroom units – feature a flowing lava pattern, and pillars made of dark olive marble were hammered and brushed in order to bring out the textural characteristics of geological layers. Natural materials come to the fore in the shape of oak wood cupboards that double as workspace dividers, and in the 400- square meter executive zone, another layer of tonality was employed with a darker wood along with more premium, grey-ish colored textiles and finishes. For productivity and wellbeing, effective lighting was paramount to the project. Two models were designed by Lagranja Design, and both emit a soft, diffused light. The first, used for the public areas, is a plaster dome set flush into the ceiling, like a cluster of moons. The other, installed in the workspaces, is a suspended ring. It supports little bursts of plant life, and is lined with a special felt that helps control the ambiance acoustically. The overall result is a work environment that bridges the experiential and corporate, that is dynamic and imaginative, and at the same time possesses a functionality and operational ease demanded by a company of this size and status. Contact lagranja design
Categories: Headquarters, Office Building, office Complex, Office space, Offices |