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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.

Qvillestaden in Göteborg, Sweden by Bornstein Lyckefors

 
December 20th, 2020 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Bornstein Lyckefors

The district of Kvillestaden in Gothenburg was for a long time a declining remnant of the now closed shipyard industry along Hisingen’s docks. Today the district has a strong upward trend where old houses are mixed with expansive new developements. In this context Bornstein Lyckefors has designed an apartment building on the lot of a former post office.

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

  • Architects: Bornstein Lyckefors
  • Project: Qvillestaden
  • Location: Göteborg, Sweden
  • Photography: Åke Eson Lindman, Bosse Lind
  • Client: PEAB
  • Designteam: Johan Olsson, Per Bornstein, Andreas Lyckefors, Jenny Andersson Höfvner, Petr Herman, Caroline Jokiniemi, Ainhoa Etxeberria, Karen Cubells, Viktor Stansvik
  • Size: 8453 kvm
  • Year: 2018

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

The design of the building draws inspiration and logic from the adjacent “Landshövdinge-houses”, the traditional and characteristic Gothenburg building type with a ground floor clad in brick, followed by two to three floors in wood. Today, most of the wooden facades have been replaced with sheet metal, and the facades on the block are therefore brick, with upper stories in corrugated zinc. By dividing the block into segments and giving each part one of three monochromatic color schemes, a connection was created to the traditional closed-block typology with its broken scale and mid-block property division. Each part was also given its own balcony railing, which with small differences in design further breaks down the scale and creates a variation in the urban landscape.

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

The courtyard stands in stark contrast to the street environment and can be likened to an oasis, far from the city’s noise. In principle all surfaces; facades, entrance balconies, stairwells and terraces are clad in heat-treated pine. Shared balconies accessed from the stairwells, a common terraced area and other seating in the courtyard are situated to catch the sun in as many positions as possible. The entrance balconies that frame the courtyard are functining as an outdoor room for each home. In this way the residents have access to an extra balcony in addition to the one facing the street and the urban space.

The apartment distribution ranges from studios to multi-storey apartments with associated roof terraces. The aim has been to create efficient plans with good lighting conditions and a rich social environment. The balconies and entrance balconies give the apartments two more “rooms”, which enlargens the experience of the apartments.

Image Courtesy © Bosse Lind

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

Image Courtesy © Åke Eson Lindman

Image Courtesy © Bosse Lind

Image Courtesy © Bosse Lind

Image Courtesy © Bornstein Lyckefors

Image Courtesy © Bornstein Lyckefors

Image Courtesy © Bornstein Lyckefors

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Categories: Apartments, House, Housing Development, Residential




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