Concrete” art gallery in Dubai

Building design
Polycarbonate-facade-art-gallery-old-warehouse

The front façade of the former industrial hall was completely replaced

OMA realized their first building in Dubai: A former warehouse was converted into an art gallery for the Alserkal Avenue art area.

The architecture of the United Arab Emirates is usually characterized by superlatives. Dubai’s newly opened multi-purpose hall “Concrete” by OMA shows that building can also be more modest.

Alserkal Avenue was founded in 2007 to promote Dubai’s art and culture scene. Since then, the former industrial area has developed into Dubai’s artists’ quarter – with exhibitions in 25 galleries.

Now a multi-purpose hall was needed in which temporary events, exhibitions, performances and workshops could be held. OMA transformed a vacant building in the middle of the district: a former warehouse with almost 1,300 square meters.

Individual floor plan configurations

In order to create as much space as possible for the “Event Area”, all service rooms were arranged in a brace at the rear of the building. This opens up the exhibition area to the inner courtyard, which is the venue of Alserkal Avenue.

The eight-metre-high exhibition space can form various room configurations thanks to asystem of sliding and rotating walls. This creates sections between 70 and 600 square meters in size, which guide visitors through the sections in ever-changing movements.

Translucent façade

While the interior was kept simple and functional, the architects intervened more strongly in the façade design. The front facing the inner courtyard was replaced by a four-door, translucent polycarbonate façade. The floor-to-ceiling doors can be opened to the inner courtyard so that the outside space can serve as an extended exhibition area.

When closed, diffuse light enters the interior – the roof sheds are another source of light. All other exterior walls were left in place and covered with black shotcrete. It contains small shards of mirror that sparkle in the sun.

Although the office is based in Dubai, Concrete is the first OMA building in the United Arab Emirates. Rem Koolhaas explains: “Dubai has a strong influence on our work. I am delighted that we were able to realize our first building here with this project.”

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Sustainability, design and art for fashion: the COS concept stores

Building design
Concept store in Mexico City with the iconic Day Bed by Mexican designer Jorge Arturo Hocker Ibarra. Photo: Fernando Marroquin, © & Courtesy COS.

Concept store in Mexico City with the iconic Day Bed by Mexican designer Jorge Arturo Hocker Ibarra. Photo: Fernando Marroquin, © & Courtesy COS.

The first concept stores from fashion brand COS have opened in Mexico City and Stockholm. Sustainability, art and design characterize the interior design of the stores.

The first concept stores of the fashion brand COS have been opened in Stockholm and Mexico City. In addition to fashion, interior architecture, design and art play important roles there. Concept stores stand for cross-selling. They complement the brand range with other products that also represent the spirit and idea of a brand. Concept stores are geared towards inspiration and experiential shopping, their product range towards the lifestyle of the visitors. Flying visits to COS in Stockholm and Mexico City show this: Even before aesthetics and lifestyle, there are very important sustainability strategies.

The fashion brand COS is part of the Swedish H&M Group and opened its first store in London in 2007. The fashion goods fall into the mid-range price segment and quickly became so popular that by 2022 there were already 259 stores in 47 countries. In its fashion design, COS follows a modern minimalist aesthetic in menswear and womenswear. COS offers ready-to-wear. The focus is not on seasonal trends, but on durability, quality and a high-quality color palette. An in-house sustainability team works every day to find the right solutions. The COS concept stores also stand for this idea, the idea of a more sustainable world. The architecture team at COS works with recycled, local materials and artisan products with a regional tradition. This creates identity, an ideal sustainability factor.

How do COS and its team of architects approach the subject? In principle, COS works like a restorer and preserves as much of the substance and character of an existing building as possible when renovating. The result is an exciting mix of historical architecture and the modern COS style. Even building in existing buildings saves CO2 emissions and is more sustainable than demolition. The principle is retained in the interior fit-out: Local materials or those from the circular economy, products from the region, work by designers and artists from the geographical area determine the interior. The long-term goal of the COS Concept Store is to achieve 100% circular purchasing. Solutions for this include the use of energy-efficient LED lighting and the use of bricks made from denim production waste. There is also the “COS Loop”, a kind of exchange platform on which the store teams can swap items for the store fittings with each other. Art always plays a major role at COS as a source of ideas and identity. Its importance has grown once again in the concept stores. The cooperation projects between COS and artists began a long time ago: in 2012, for example, there was an art project during the Gallery Weekend in Berlin that created a much-noticed scenographic window design. Carsten Nicolai installed his light installation “Schatten Loop” in the window of the COS store in Berlin-Mitte and attracted a large audience during the art weekend.

COS’s first concept store in Europe is a newly renovated old COS store in the lively pedestrian zone of Bibliotheksgatan in Stockholm. New retail concepts and sustainability have been combined here on 566 square meters over two floors. The interior design is largely made from recycled materials: display tables are made from recycled paper, the mannequins are made from used polystyrene and the aluminum rails for hanging are made from 30% recycled aluminum. The furnishings are designed to have a maximum life cycle and therefore low follow-up costs. And in the Stockholm concept store, art is a permanent feature, just like in a gallery. The first exhibition showed paintings by Swedish painter Liselotte Watkins, who also designed an edition for COS – this is not very price-intensive and the editions are affordable for many customers.

In a metropolis with a population of 23 million like Mexico City, a sustainably planned concept store is a real asset. “Air pollution is serious (…) Although modern environmental laws are in place, they are not consistently implemented because there is a lack of awareness of the problem among large sections of the population and the administration,” says the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) on the case of Mexico and environmental policy. Following the Stockholm launch balloon, COS has opened another concept store based on sustainability strategies in the Polanco district in the middle of Mexico City. Here, too, a lot of unusual materials, old and used items have been given a new lease of life in the design of the 486 square meters of retail space: The hardwood normally used for interior furnishings has been replaced by bamboo, which has a better growth rate and can store more carbon than hardwood. It is also much more durable in comparison. The floor in the sales area is made of terrazzo tiles, 90 percent of which are made from quarry waste. Yarn waste from the supply chain was used to make the carpets, and panels for various fixtures consist of 60 percent recycled plastic bottles spun into felt.

The COS concept store in Mexico City also focuses on cross-selling and there is plenty of design and art from local studios. There are two auratic stools from the Totem Collection by furniture maker Daniel Orozco, who works in southern Mexico, and the iconic Day Bed by Jorge Arturo Ibarra. The most striking decorations on the wall are not paintings but a kind of modern tapestry. They come from the Caralarga Studio near Mexico City, a company run by women – which is also sustainable, because without female empowerment there can be no sustainable social design. Caralarga specializes in sustainable fashion and wall decorations and has contributed wall decorations using thread weaving techniques to the interior concept of the concept store in Polanco. With their simplicity and reduced design language, they emphasize the beauty of raw materials and also contribute to waste avoidance, as the material they are made of would otherwise have ended up in landfills.

Read also how the Veja brand opened a new store in Madrid and what was important for the interior design.

Colorful summer party

Building design

Kurt Schmidt

Under the title “Colorful! Material Illusion”, the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation invites you to the traditional Bauhaus Festival on the first weekend in September.

This year, the Bauhaus in Dessau is celebrating the 20th Bauhaus Festival, a tradition that dates back to the 1920s. Once again, visitors can expect a varied program designed by artists and students from various art academies. Following this year’s title “Colorful! Material Illusion”, everyone is invited to come dressed as colorfully as possible on Friday, September 1 (preview evening) and Saturday, September 2.

Architecture becomes audible, material becomes danceable, walls become permeable and people become objects. This year, the Bauhaus Festival focuses on the colorfulness of things. In around 40 program items ranging from music to installations, in play spaces and experiments, they will be illuminated, put on stage and set in motion. This is a continuation of a tradition, as the historic Bauhaus was known for its experimental approach to materials. The Bauhaus festivals are legendary – they served to open up the house and showcase the artistic work. But also the celebrations themselves. Since 1997, the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation has hosted the Bauhaus Festival once a year. It is a permanent fixture in Dessau’s cultural life and an annual attraction for around 5,000 visitors from beyond the city limits.

Bauhaus Festival 2017 – September 1-2, 2017
Bauhaus building Dessau
Gropiusallee 38, 06846 Dessau-Roßlau

Find out more at: www.bauhaus-dessau.de