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Adidas Laces in Herzogenaurach, Germany by Kadawittfeldarchitektur GmbH

Saturday, October 22nd, 2011

Article source: Kadawittfeldarchitektur

Brief
Research and development building with 1700 working places at the adidas World of Sports campus in Herzogenaurach. Added Value In contrast to conventional office typologies, the ring structure developed by kadawittfeldarchitektur lends to the building a double relationship to the landscape – both to the outer surroundings and to the communicative landscape of the atrium. The connecting walkways, “Laces”, efficiently open up access to all office areas without the need to cross through other departments. At the same time they transform the atrium into a creative center of the building that provides an identity.

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

  • Architects: Kadawittfeldarchitektur GmbH
  • Project: Adidas Laces
  • Location:Herzogenaurach, Germany
  • Construction Volume: BGF 62.000 m², BRI 356.000 m³, Office Space 29.000 m²
  • Completion + Construction time: 08/2008 – 06/2011
  • Client: adidas AG, World of Sports
  • Project Team: Benjamin Beckers, Frank Berners, Holger Giesen, Jens Johannisson, Lutz Langer, Minh Nguyen, Arnd Schüle, Ute Schmidt,  Julia Therstappen, Andrea Thörner,  Roswitha van der Kooi,  Sascha Thomas (visualization), Daniel Trappen (interior design), Christiane Luiz (interior design), Eva Strotmeier (interior design)

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

  • Project Team Competition:Dirk Zweering, Mathias Faber, Christoph Helmus, Jonas Kroeber, Sascha Thomas, Astrid Dierkes, Michael Rahmfeld
  • Photographer: Werner Huthmacher, Berlin, Christian Richters, Münster
  • Project Management: DU Diedrichs, München
  • Construction Site Management: CL-MAP GmbH, München
  • Landscape Architecture: Adler+Olesch, Nürnberg
  • Structural Engineering: Weischede, Herrmann + Partner, Stuttgart
  • Facade Engineering: PBI, Wertingen

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

  • Building Physics: Ingenieurgesellschaft für Bauphysik TOHR, Bergisch-Gladbach
  • Fire Engeneering: hhpBerlin, München
  • management consultation: M.O.O.CON, Frankfurt/Main
  • coordinator for safety and health matters: Genesis Umwelt Consult, Schwabach
  • Signage System: büro uebele, Stuttgart
  • Design Office Furniture: Kinzo, Berlin
  • Design Furniture Lounges: kadawittfeldarchitektur, Aachen

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

adidas Laces,  Herzogenaurach| germany The new Laces blends into the existing World of Sports ensemble as a floating counterpart to the black, recumbent mass of the adidas Brand Center. Its clearly contoured volume positively invites the surrounding campus to find a continuation within its interior, an atrium with a controlled climate. Lined up in a circular arrangement, the office areas with their large glazed surfaces open onto the atmospheric inner space and the remarkable landscaped space. The connecting walkways that cross the atrium, the Laces, “tie” the built volume together, as it were, to form a many-layered office building that is rich in relationships. They enable a maximum of interaction and allow open areas of communication to emerge. As delicate connecting bridges, they weave a poetic spatial structure into the interior and thus make the special creative atmosphere of the building legible. The result is an inspiring place for research and product development.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

typologie office building   construction volume gfa 62.000m² cubature 356.000m³   realization 2008-2011   client adidas AG World of Sports   competition 1st Prize 2007   architect kadawittfeldarchitektur    project partner Dirk Zweering   awards Office Application Award 2009: Best Innovative Concept

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

Adi Dassler was inspired by a single idea when he made his first shoes: all athletes should get shoes that were  ideally adapted to them and their discipline. Almost 100 years later, this motto still applies at adidas.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

[ Task ]

The adidas brand is characterised by permanent development, as it was in the days of the company founder Adi Dassler. Innovations don’t happen by chance, however, and they happen not only in the development department but every day, when employees apply their minds, are committed and collaborate with passion on the creation of new products. The further extension of the “World of Sports” by means of the sustainable office building called Laces makes a significant contribution by providing employees not only with functional and optimised working conditions but also with inspiring surroundings that encourage creativity.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

In the competition that was held in 2006, the challenge was to match the high functional and architectural standards of the buildings previously constructed here, and at the same time to represent the individual character of the adidas brand.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

[ Intention ]

Adi Dassler’s endeavour to make the perfect product can be transferred to architecture in many ways.

The aim of the proposal was to create a building that fitted the adidas brand. This applied to the design of the building, on the one hand, but above all to the atmosphere and everyday creative work. A building in which employees work with both success and enjoyment, and one that makes it possible to experience every day what it is that makes the location in Herzogenaurach so special. It was not to be a typical office building with zones separated according to department, but an unmistakable place for the mainly young employees from all over the world to identify with the company. Starting from countless different approaches, what finally emerged was the idea of a ring-shaped building with a spacious atrium and connecting walkways, the “laces” (like the laces of a shoe), which give the structure its name on account of their particular geometry: crossing the airspace of the atrium, they connect office areas lying opposite each other on each level and thus “tie” the volume together to form an office building that is rich in multi-faceted relationships. The themes of movement and dynamism are ever-present in this way and convey to the employees the feeling of being part of the creative work process.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

[ Embedding in the Landscape / Context of HerzoBase ]

The campus is formed from a loose arrangement of individual built volumes, each of which speaks a distinctive and unique architectural language in it own right but at the same time takes its place in the diverse ensemble of the World of Sports. Laces is situated in the southeastern part of the site, between the adidas Brand Center and the Adi Dassler Sports Ground. The topography is used to let the landscape flow into the transparent covered atrium and the building via the two-storey entrance area, and thus to extend the extraordinary quality of the campus in the form of an artificial landscape. The green space of the park is present in the atrium at all times through the two-storey glass façade. The clear contour of the ring-shaped structure permits an uninterrupted view of the surrounding country from every department. Only the part containing the Test Hall lies outside the shell and is integrated into the topography as a greened-over hill.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

[ Complex of Buildings ]

As a counterpart to the black and somewhat flat volume of the adidas Brand Center, Laces fits into the existing complex of buildings with its white banded façade and its dynamic architectural volume. The clearly contoured   volume positively invites the surrounding campus to find a continuation inside as a climate-controlled atrium. Lined up in a ring, the office spaces open up to the atmospheric interior and the remarkable landscape with their large glazed surfaces. Within the individual storeys the “laces”, free linking walkways that span the atrium, permit a maximum of interaction and quick connections, and allow areas of open communication to arise. The walkways “tie” the building together in terms of structural engineering, too, making it a multi-layered office environment with abundant relationships. As delicate connecting bridges, they weave a poetic spatial structure into the interior and thus make the special creative atmosphere of the building legible. The result is an inspiring place for research and product development. The external appearance of Laces is characterised by its clearly contoured, reflective smoothness, which is thus courteously unobtrusive and visually reduces the built volume. The smooth façade surfaces are structured and articulated by set-back loggias corresponding to the walkways.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

Laces can broadly be divided into four zones:

– the office area on the four storeys above ground level, the so-called Office Module;
– the areas for special use on the ground floor, the so-called Service Module;
– the model workshops, materials laboratories and research areas including the Test Hall, the so-called Innovation Module; and
– the technical areas, store rooms and other auxiliary rooms.

 

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

Inside Laces the zones known as the Office Module account for the largest part of the building in terms of volume and surface. This is where the “creative units” will move in, whose working materials consist not of paper and files, as is normal, but of textiles, shoes and accessories such as bags, balls etc. In their understated white or grey colour scheme the office areas produce a studio-like atmosphere for creative work on products, designs and ideas. Here the purpose of the mainly neutral colour scheme is not only tranquillity in view of all the colourful variety of the products, but also to ensure a working atmosphere that is as bright and pleasant as possible. In a conscious contrast to the light-coloured Office Module and the white, transparent inner façade, the eponymous “laces” take the form of dark grey catwalks, connecting belts which pass through and lend structure to the spacious atrium with their all-round charcoal colour.

Image Courtesy Werner Huthmacher

At the points where the walkways enter the surrounding office spaces, the so-called Office Lounges form open areas for communication that are oriented to the outside thanks to the loggias placed in front of them and represent an invitation to stay and relax. The interplay of the walkways and the encircling Office Module provides maximum flexibility in the placement of departments and takes account of security requirements: there must be no crossing of other departments. Moreover, the disturbance caused by people passing through departments no longer exists. At the same time internal relationships between different departments are created by a high degree of transparency. The central atrium becomes a zone of communication adjoined by meeting areas for common use by different departments and by the bistro lounge.

Pikto campus

[ Ground and Basement Floors for Special Uses]

Service Module
All around the atrium and Innovation Valley to the east, the ground floor is occupied by special areas, partly open to public access, such as the Service Point and the central meeting rooms, as well as the reception rooms of Fit & Wear for external product testers. The Timeout bistro acts as the employees’ cafeteria and makes sufficient space available for a snack, with seating for 250 in the atrium, in the building or on the spacious outdoor terrace.

 

Building volume

Innovation Valley

Innovation Valley constitutes a lower-lying green courtyard within the atrium and is reached via a wide flight of steps from the ground floor. Innovation Valley is surrounded at basement level by production and development departments in which research is carried out and new products are developed and made as test products.

Athlete Services is an out-of-the-ordinary place: individual care for athletes under contract, teams and VIPs takes place right here. Individually adapted products are made and presented on the spot for outstanding athletes who enjoy individual attention from adidas.

The Athlete Services Lounge, which is centrally located in this area, is bordered by various rooms in which body measurements are taken, clothing is tried on and shoes can be adapted and fitted with the help of the latest  biomechanical methods of analysis. The Lounge provides a relaxed place where athletes can spend time while waiting for their tailor-made product and take receipt of it in a casual atmosphere.

 

Ground floor Plan

Also situated at Innovation Valley and symbolically at the heart of the building is the Brand Archive, in which prized adidas mementoes, important products from the company history and the evolution of design and products, are kept and can serve as sources of research and inspiration for employees engaged in today’s product development.

Innovation Module
The Innovation Module encompasses the product development departments and the product test areas, and extends around Innovation Valley on the ground floor and basement level with its materials labs and sample workshops. The seedbed of research and development for future adidas products is the Test Hall of the Biomechanical Lab. It is used for product tests. The Test Hall is more than three times as large as the standard dimensions of a gymnasium and has a roof shape based on the trajectory of a ball. Here it is possible to shoot a ball right through the whole hall and the door at the end of the hall to the outside. A number of running tracks equipped with measuring instruments and cameras provide ideal test conditions for newly developed running shoes; a pitch with artificial turf is used for testing football, rugby and American football boots.

[ Appearance ]

Without resorting to showy acrobatics of design, the building has been given an appearance that matches the adidas brand. Its perceived volume is reduced by the striped character of the façade, a result of the alternation of white surface bands with dark bands of windows. The smooth, reflective surface of the façade further reinforces this reduction. Depending on the angle from which the façades are viewed, the building melts into a mirror image of the surrounding landscape.

The walkways that mark the interior are also apparent on the exterior, where loggias give a structure to the long façades in the shape of three-dimensional vertical cut-outs.

In order to lend dynamic expression to the sharp-edged volume and to extend upwards the spatial impression of the atrium, two of the six sides of the building lean outwards slightly. This incline is continued through the whole building via the walkways that are connected to these sides. In this way the loggia zones, cut out at a slight diagonal, refer to the dynamics of the interior.

The two façades that flank the two-storey entrance area have also been turned, in order to make visible as much as possible of the horizon of the campus. By this means the campus remains connected to the surrounding countryside despite the size and width of the building.

[ Façades ]

The starting point for the design scheme is a smooth and sharp-edged contour of the built volume, which takes its character from the white-enamelled exterior bands. The building is also articulated by the dark-looking horizontal bands of windows, which are broken and divided by loggias, placed vertically one above the other with their black facings. The smooth appearance of the façade is achieved through the use of a construction of aluminium elements in the form of a structural glazing façade, with triple-glass insulation windows and integrated sun and glare shield in the intermediate space between the glass panes.

At the south-west of the building, the circular shape opens up over two storeys to create a large, roofed porch area as the entrance to the campus. In order to assist the flow of the landscape into the atrium interior by means of maximum transparency of the façade and to maintain delicate façade profiles, the steel construction is suspended from the section of the ring-shaped volume that lies above. The inclined sides and ends of the adjoining sections of the building on both sides of the main entrance reflect the surrounding landscape thanks to high-gloss, invisibly attached wall cladding of polished stainless-steel sheets.

The high proportion of glazing on the outer façade and the floor-to-ceiling windows of the inner façade towards the atrium ensure that the work areas are extremely well lit and that their communicative ambience has a transparent character.

Thanks to the fact the whole atrium was roofed with a printed foil-cushion roof and has a controlled temperature, it was possible to fit the inner façades with single glazing without vertical bars.

[ Holistic Approach ]

An additional feature of this building is that it was possible to include other design themes such as orientation and office furnishings into the planning process at an unusually early stage. This led to the creation of an exceptionally homogeneous whole. The building, interior design, graphics and furnishings are all of a piece.

[ Concept for Office Space ]

Laces was conceived as a flexible office building. Changes in the composition and size of teams or of the entire occupying units are every bit as normal in a globally active company like adidas as the temporary integration of employees from other locations worldwide or groups of external persons. This means that the use of space within the Office Module can be adapted to organisational changes more easily than hitherto. This reversible concept for office space is based on modular units of occupancy following the planning grid of 1.60 metres, a flexible partition system to create individual offices and meeting rooms, and on an elaborate technical pre-installation enabling media provision that also functions according to the planning grid.

An essential point here is the allocation of the office space into three functional zones: two workplace zones, one each along the outer and inner façade, and a multifunctional zone between them. While the workplace zones contain both closed spatial units and also open group offices, the multifunctional zone is conceived as an open area that connects the two other zones. It provides space for informal meetings, temporary workplaces and space for storage, printers and other functions.

[ Furnishing Scheme ]

WORKOUT, a scheme of furnishing that was developed especially for adidas, was designed by Kinzo from Berlin, and in contrast to today’s standard office furniture takes account not only of the requirements of normal ad-hoc communication but also of work on and with the product. At the same time the furniture design takes its cue from the architecture, the scheme of colours and materials, and especially the manner of working in the different departments and product areas. For example, a special system of cupboards and shelves was evolved that is particularly suitable for textiles, shoes and accessories like bags, balls etc., and can be equipped in a highly flexible way.

Quote from Kinzo, the company that designed the interior of the Office Module:

“WORKOUT translates the communicative architectural concept of kadawittfeldarchitektur into a furniture and interior design that was tailor-made for the individual requirements and the special demands of the working environment at adidas. Through the interplay of architecture and interior, Laces is like a perfectly harmonised film set that therefore matches one hundred per cent the identity of the company and the brand. The core item of the furniture system is the Teamplayer, a multifunctional spatial module that lends a dynamic and rhythmic structure to the open office level and conducts the wave-like flow of the building into the space. The effect of the bracket-like Teamplayer elements is to unfold separate rooms, light and transparent, and at the same time to clearly mark out the working territory of a team.”

[ System of Orientation ]

To permit better orientation, the Laces building is divided first of all into two segments of approximately equal size, each of which is identified with a capital letter. These letters are attached to the atrium façade on the ground floor and act as the address in the building in combination with the number of the floor. An additional aid to orientation is the identification of the Office Lounges with historical product names, which can be read on the glass panels of the corresponding walkways.

This is a layering of names and visible letters which characterise the spirit of the building, as if they were hovering in the air at the centre of the atrium. To make orientation in this large building easier, the Office Lounges and coffee-making areas in each of its cores are decorated in uniform primary colours.

Quote by Professor Andreas Uebele, the planner of the orientation and guidance system:

“movement in sports determines the graphic language. dynamic typography is present throughout the building (…) on the glass balustrade panels, depending to the storey, diverse typographical images are formed that produce a moving but restrained image when seen from the atrium (…) the contours of the letters and the arrows are shifted horizontally and repeated rhythmically to create the impression of a script that is reminiscent of movement in sport”

“the colourless typography takes its place in this coolly objective, understated world without subordinating itself,  reflecting human motion and thus reinforcing the associations with the theme of sport”

[ Support Structure ]

The atrium roof is formed by a support structure of steel arches that rest on the ring-shaped building and the supports of the walkways. The spatial and climatic boundary is a transparent, three-layer cushion roof of ETFE, kept rigid by means of an air supply. A grid of dots printed on the outside of the cushions reduces the solar warming effect. The cushion construction is supported by four-metre-high external steel lattice formwork that can span a distance of up to 50 metres and is hardly perceptible from inside due to the printing.

The “laces” themselves are suspended from lattice supports, which make it possible to limit the height of the walkway construction to 30 centimetres. The slenderness of the structure was an important criterion in planning, so that the desired transparency and openness of the atrium is not diminished despite the large number of walkways.

The innovative support structure based on the joint-free construction of the ring-shaped building with integrated compensation strips made it possible to save more than 300 tons of reinforcing steel, which was highly advantageous for the ecological profile of the building. The ring is further braced at the roof by means of fasteners set laterally on the steel lattice supports. By this means it was possible to give the arch support construction an extremely delicate form without any suspension ties at all despite the great distance to be spanned.

A further distinguishing feature is the projection of the entrance section, which opens the atrium a long way into the park without additional supports. To make this possible the entrance part of the building was conceived as a bridge-like section spanning over 60 metres and held by two gigantic lattice supports. The larger of the lattice supports alone weighs approximately 60 tons, which is roughly equal to the weight of a jumbo jet.

[ Technical Installations ]

In the technical installations of the building great importance was attached to the ability to make spatial changes with the minimum effort. For this purpose elaborate technical installations have been fitted in the ceiling and floor according to a grid of the possible positions of partition walls.

Although a large proportion of the extensive technical equipment is in the ceiling, and in spite of the considerable requirements in terms of cooling and sound insulation, a calm and homogeneous appearance of the ceilings from below was achieved. For example the smoke alarms and sprinklers, the cooling and heating ceiling, sound absorption elements and other technical features are concealed in this ceiling.

The climate control of the offices is an economically integrative system. A cooling ceiling with a very high specific performance is combined with a visually effective baffle ceiling. Highly efficient air-supply vents with an air change rate of 1.5 complete this system. The exhaust air flows over the façade into the atrium. By this means it is possible to dispense almost completely with ducts for exhaust office air in a shaft, which is economical because space and costs are saved. At the same time energy is extracted from the exhaust office air and used for conditioning the climate in the atrium. With the help of heating and cooling installations in the ceiling and floor of the atrium, temperatures of 16 – 28°C are achieved all year round. The remaining energy of the air in the atrium is recirculated to the office air supply via central heat-recovery systems.

[ Sustainability ]

In planning and building Laces, numerous measures were adopted that combine to form a coherent overall strategy for sustainability. Building shell and energy economics: the glazing of the highly insulated outer façades is a three-layer structural glazing construction that complies with the highest standards in respect of the thermal and moisture-protection qualities of the shell of the building. By covering the atrium with an extremely light ETFE cushion roof which is UV-permeable and requires very little cleaning, it was possible to optimise the outer surface (i.e. improve significantly the ratio of outer surface to volume).

Laces over-fulfils the requirements of the German directive on energy saving (EnEV) by 38.8%. The climate conditioning of the atrium is carried out by streaming conditioned air from the office areas with higher air pressure, so that no additional operating costs are incurred for the atrium. In this way it was possible to reduce the area devoted to air ducts in the cores, for example, and thus optimising the usable area. The energy from the exhaust air is recirculated via an energy recovery system.

Considerable electricity savings were achieved by means of intelligent light control such as dimmable lighting controlled by daylight and presence. The illumination of the “laces” in the whole atrium is supplied by means of  a 750-metre-long LED lighting strip. The power requirement and the need for heating and cooling were further optimised thanks to controllable sunlight and glare protection (extremely high rate of use of daylight). Geothermal warmth: The use of renewable energy through 28 geothermal probes with a length of approximately 4300 metres results in a carbon saving of some 80 tons per year.

Green roof: The whole 1700m² surface of the test centre roof was greened, planted with native species of vegetation and landscaped to integrate it into the surroundings. Use of rainwater to reduce the consumption of mains water and minimise use of the waste-water infrastructure: For WCs and urinals rainwater is used all year round. Precipitation on the main roof of Laces is channelled to a subterranean rainwater cistern with a capacity of 180m³. Surplus rainwater is used for irrigating the grounds. The use of water-saving, no-touch faucets was a further means of reducing water consumption.

Humboldt Box in Berlin, Germany by KSV Architekten

Friday, October 21st, 2011

Article source: KSV Architekten

The Humboldt Box will accompany the building of the Humboldt Forum/Stadtschloss Berlin as an information and exhibition structure. As a temporary building, it will be dismantled with the completion of the Humboldt Forum after a predicted lifetime eight years. Until then, later users of the Humboldt Forum – among them the National Museums in Berlin, the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation as well as the Central and Regional Library Berlin – will be using the structure to provide a glimpse into their various collections. The Association for the Rebuilding of the Berliner Stadtschloss will be informing visitors about the history of the Berlin Palace, the reconstruction of the palace façade, and the historical courtyard.

Image Courtesy Lustgarten+Karsten Pagel

  • Architects: KSV Krüger Schuberth Vandreike
  • Project: Humboldt Box
  • Location:Berlin, Germany
  • Client: Megaposter GmbH
  • Project Director: gassert a+i berlin, architekten + ingenieure, Kurt R. Gassert
  • Konzept: Bertram Vandreike, Christiane Schuberth, Torsten Krüger
  • Projektleitung: Markus Reinhardt

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St Antony Hütte in Oberhausen, Germany by Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch (designed using ArchiCAD)

Saturday, October 15th, 2011

Article source: Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch

Industrial archaeological Park of Rhineland Industrial Museum

By the end of 2007, the regional authority and the city Oberhausen announced a bounded competition.

The archaeological excavations of St Antony have been realized to make the region accessible to the first blast furnace of the Ruhr. The competition challenge implied to protect these archaeological excavations by a weather barrier and, furthermore, make them tangible by a footbridge.

Febuary 2008, the jury advised to arrange the architects awarded by the first prize, Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch in cooperation with the engineering office Schülke & Wiesmann with further planning.

 

Front View in Night (Images Courtesy Deimel & Wittmar)

  • Architect: Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch, Essen · Berlin
  • Name of Project: St Antony Hütte in Oberhausen – Cradle of the Ruhr Merge
  • Location: Oberhausen, Germany
  • Awarding authority: LVR Landschaftsverband Rheinland
  • Structural engineer: Schülke & Wiesmann, Dortmund
  • Photographs: Deimel & Wittmar
  • Software used: Graphisoft ArchiCAD

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Depot Zollverein in Essen, Germany by Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch (designed using ArchiCAD)

Thursday, October 13th, 2011

Article source: Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch

Neubau Depot und Verwaltung RUHR MUSEUM in Essen

Depot and Administration RUHR MUSEUM on the world heritage Zollverein, Essen

An extreme restraint for all structural addition within the context of the world heritage – the colliery of Zollverein with all architectural qualities and inestimable historic values – is indicated. The course of the design for the new depot of the Ruhr Museum was based on serenity and mastery. Clear geometry and decreased material selection were ways and methods for the design. On the one hand, the building is positioned into the correct context, on the other hand it abstracts and sublimates this context.

 

Depot Zollverein

  • Architect: Ahlbrecht Felix Scheidt Kasprusch
  • Name of Project: Depot Zollverein
  • Location: Essen, Germany
  • Implementation competition: 2008, 1st award
  • Completion: 2010
  • Photographs: Deimel & Wittmar
  • Software used: Graphisoft ArchiCAD

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Haus Henter in Reichenau, Germany by Team [tp3] architekten

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

Article source: Team [tp3] architekten

Situated on the outskirts of the village of Reichenau, it is almost impossible to tell the original appearance of this detached home, which was built in the 1970s. The extension and renovation of the building in the context of an economical and ecological renewal took top priority in the planning considerations.

Front View

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Sony Center in Berlin, Germany by Murphy/Jahn Architects

Sunday, October 9th, 2011

Article source: Murphy/Jahn Architects

Sony center comprises seven mixed-use buildings organized around the central forum. Three of these buildings are corporate headquarters, each located at the corners of the site. Sony Europanzentral relates to the Tiergarten, the Duetsche Bonn headquarters tower forms a marker on the Potsdamnerplatz, and the headquarters for Sanofi anchors the Philharmonie corner.

Night View

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Marstall Platz in Hannover, Germany by Maxwan Architects+Urbanists

Sunday, October 9th, 2011

Article source: Maxwan Architects+Urbanists

Currently, the space is a parking lot with open ends toward city center shopping district and the Leine River, while the long sides are bound by a residential district and a red light district. Given its central location and its surroundings rough bite, the site is a perfect habitat for young creative people.

Rendering

  • Architect: Maxwan Architects+Urbanists
  • Name of Project: Marstall Platz
  • Location: Hannover, Germany
  • Scale: S
  • Site area: 1.5 ha
  • Software used: AutoCAD, 3dsmax, Illustrator, Photoshop, Excel

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minimumhouse in Klausdorf, Germany by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten (designed using ArchiCAD)

Saturday, October 8th, 2011

Article source: Scheidt Kasprusch Arc

The minimumhouse at Mellensee, situated to the south of Berlin, is a prototype for a serial holiday and residentialhouse. Under the label minimumhouse it is offered including all furniture and fittings. The concept was developed by the ideal of a house with maximum outdoor impressions and also by making full use of the solar yields for the building.

 

Images Courtesy Christian Gahl

  • Architect: Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten
  • Name of Project: minimumhouse
  • Location: Klausdorf, Germany
  • Awarding authority: minimumeinrichten gmbh
  • Completion: 2008
  • Photographs: Christian Gahl
  • Software used: ArchiCAD

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Transparent Park Bridges in Brandenburg, Germany by Bulant & Wailzer (designed with Rhino and AutoCAD)

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Article source: Bulant & Wailzer

In the dreamed and romantic palace park, designed by the famous classicistic landscape architect Peter Joseph Lenné, the appearance of the eight small bridges with different lengths, from 2 to 10 meter, should be very discreet and in harmony with the historical environment. Nevertheless we choose glass as building material as indication for our time and a modern building technology. During the day the transparent glass bridges are disappearing in the environment through their mirroring and reflecting. In the night they become visible through the magic light that they radiate from bellow.

Day View

  • Architects: Architecture Studio Bulant & Wailzer
  • Project: Transparent Park Bridges
  • Location: Brandenburg, Germany
  • Competition: 2003
  • Software used: Renderings in Rhino and Photoshop, Drawings in AutoCAD

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Research & Sports Hall of Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany by Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten (designed using ArchiCAD)

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Article source: Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten

A research facility in energy-efficient construction

In 2009 the Ed. Züblin AG, with the concept of Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten, was able to obtain the competing award procedure for the construction of a research-coliseum for Humboldt University Berlin.

Exterior View (Images Courtesy Rainer Gollmer)

  • Architect: Scheidt Kasprusch Architekten
  • Name of Project: Research & Sports Hall of Humboldt University
  • Location: Berlin, Germany
  • Photographs: Rainer Gollmer
  • Awarding authority: Humboldt University Berlin
  • Contractor: Ed. Züblin AG
  • Software used: Graphisoft ArchiCAD

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