An apartment building in Leipzig closes a gap in a Wilhelminian-style perimeter block development, creating a homogeneous streetscape. Read more about the architects from KO/OK Architektur BDA closing the gap here.
The gap between buildings in Leipzig-Connewitz
The architectural firm KO/OK Architektur BDA, based in Leipzig and Stuttgart, has closed a narrow gap between buildings in Leipzig-Connewitz. At the end of the Second World War, a gap was created in the otherwise completely closed, Wilhelminian-style perimeter block development in this district. The reason for this was an unextinguished fire.
In the following years, the area was mainly used as a parking lot for cars and as a storage area for equipment. This resulted in garages with no aesthetic value. At the same time, the structure around the property has remained largely intact. Both the historic structure and building style as well as the view of the green inner courtyard are still recognizable, despite renovation and redensification work over the years. Today, the entire street in Leipzig-Connewitz is a listed building.
For this reason, the new apartment building, which was developed by the architectural firm KO/OK Architektur DBA, also had to comply with the requirements of the monument protection authority. The street-side façade of the new building blends in with the Wilhelminian-style neighborhood. As a result, the streetscape remains homogeneous despite the closure of the gap.
The apartment building by KO/OK Architektur closes the gap
The façade of the new apartment building in Leipzig-Connewitz is clad in diamond-shaped concrete slabs with regional granite aggregate at the base. In this way, the architects wanted to pick up on the plinth theme of the neighborhood and implement it in a high-quality design language. The façade of the upper floors has a scratch coat in the color “quince”.
The windows of the building are floor-to-ceiling and made of wood. They are evenly distributed across the façade. Above this is the mansard roof, the pitch of which represents a certain independence in the street. This gap closure created seven residential units, each with between 50 and 135 square meters of space.
On the first floor of the building there is space for a bicycle storage room, a garbage room and three parking spaces. A covered passageway to the garden is modeled on the typical Gründerzeit structure and, according to KO/OK, is intended to offer “a certain generosity for arriving, meeting and lingering, which is otherwise rarely found in new buildings”.
Classic apartments
The apartments in the new building are located on the first to third floors. They are organized on one level as classic apartments. The entrance to the apartments leads into a central hallway with a checkroom and bathroom. The living and dining areas with balconies are openly connected to the hallway on the courtyard side. Thanks to the west-facing orientation, they are flooded with light. The bedrooms are located on the street side and face east.
The two top-floor apartments are two-storey units with internal access. There are individual rooms and bathrooms on the lower floor, while the attic space consists of a living and dining area as well as a terrace overlooking the inner courtyard. According to KO/OK, the exposed wooden roof in the shape of a mansard is expected to create a generous, cozy feeling of space. The large skylights to the east and the terrace as a roof incision to the west create a clear connection to the outside world.
The architects from KO/OK Architektur have chosen simple, sustainable and durable constructions and building materials for this gap closure. They want to construct a building for the coming decades that avoids complex and error-prone structures. In addition, the house should age appropriately and function beyond its depreciation period. Accordingly, the exterior walls are made of highly insulated bricks. The interior walls were constructed using non-insulated bricks. Only the storey ceilings and the stairwell core are made of concrete. The roof is made of stacked timber elements with wood wool insulation and standing seam cladding. The interiors feature solid oak parquet flooring, as well as exposed concrete, exposed screed, wooden windows and doors and powder-coated steel elements on balconies and in the stairwell.
Incidentally, Leipzig is also home to the Sächsische Aufbaubank, designed by London-based ACME. You can read more about the building with its grove of columns and curved glass façades here.