Mail from Rotterdam (1)

Building design

The Baumeister Academy has sent out its first interns – to Rotterdam to MVRDV and to Berlin to Jürgen Mayer H. Our “academy students” will be reporting from their cities from time to time in the future. Here Angelika Hinterbrandner writes her first mail from Rotterdam.

The Baumeister Academy has sent out its first interns – to Rotterdam to MVRDV and to Berlin to Jürgen Mayer H. Our “academy students” will be reporting from their cities from time to time in the future. Here Angelika Hinterbrandner writes her first mail from Rotterdam.

If someone had told me a year ago that I would be leaving the house at 9 a.m. today to make my way to work at MVRDV, I don’t know how I would have reacted. I probably would have smiled nicely and thought “yeah right, and the day after tomorrow I’ll be working at OMA…”. I’ve now been in Rotterdam for almost four weeks and I already know interns who actually work at OMA. It was only a few weeks after I decided to apply for the “Baumeister Academy”, was accepted in December and started here. I finished my fifth semester at Graz University of Technology in January and set off for Rotterdam shortly afterwards.
The “newcomers” always start their first day at MVRDV a little later, so that all the other colleagues are already in the office and the big tour can begin immediately. First of all, the basic structure of the office was explained to us: the desks are divided up according to projects and project locations, and the workstations are flexible. I was given my place at the “Germany desk”, where we are currently working on projects for Mannheim and Hamburg, among others. There was a short stop at each table to introduce each other and to remember as many names as possible – a somewhat difficult task with around 70 employees. After the most important questions (“Where are you from?”, “Where are you studying?”, “Which semester?”) were answered at each table, we returned to our seats and were given the first tasks and information about our projects. I am currently working on a competition in Vienna – but more about my work in the office in the next issue.

Markthal Rotterdam

The highlight of my first two weeks in Rotterdam was a visit to the Markthal in the heart of the city. We set off with all our colleagues to see the building, which is due to be completed this fall. The two main project managers took us from the impressive main hall through the entire building. As the interior façade, which is currently being fitted with colorful printed façade elements designed by artist Arno Coenen, already suggests, you will soon be able to buy fresh fruit, vegetables, fish and many other specialties from over a hundred small stalls. The weekly market, which currently takes place in front of the Markthal, will then move here. Projects such as the “Mercat de la Boqueria” in Barcelona were the inspiration for implementing the market hall concept in the Netherlands, even though there is no cultural background. The main aim is to revitalize the city center.

However, there will not only be shopping facilities and restaurants. Apartments have also been planned. On both sides of the arch there will be a wide range of different types, from rental apartments to exclusive penthouses. The special extra for the apartments on the inside: Windows with a view into the interior of the hall. The penthouse apartments on the top floors have also been fitted with corresponding windows and additional large atriums. When you enter the apartment, you have a direct view into the interior of the hall. From a height of not quite 40 meters, you have an overview of the hustle and bustle of the market. The view over the entire city from the terraces on the top floors is just as spectacular.

After the detailed tour, Winy Maas gave an explanatory presentation for everyone about the design process and the execution up to the current status in the miniature version of the market hall, which is open to visitors and interested parties every day.

So much for today, more later.

The Baumeister Academy is supported by Graphisoft.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Local rainwater management “Kirkebjerg”

Building design

Photo: Group F

In the approximately 10-hectare housing estate “Kirkebjerg” in Ballerup, Denmark, there have been repeated problems with flooding and damp cellars in the past. At the same time, the local waste disposal companies had an interest in relieving the local sewer system in order to reduce sewer overflows in the wider sewer network. This resulted in a project for local rainwater management and heavy rainfall prevention […]

In the approximately 10-hectare housing estate “Kirkebjerg” in Ballerup, Denmark, there have been repeated problems with flooding and damp cellars in the past. At the same time, the local waste disposal companies had an interest in relieving the local sewer system in order to reduce sewer overflows in the wider sewer network. This resulted in a project for local rainwater management and heavy rainfall prevention in the extensive lawns of the housing estate.

Where the local height and space conditions allowed, the downpipes were decoupled from the sewer system and the rainwater was directed into the open spaces for evaporation and infiltration. A large part of the project was financed via a repayment scheme for connection fees. For every square meter of sealed surface that discharges less into the sewage system, the landowner, the housing association “Brøndby Boligselskab”, received a grant from the waste disposal company “HOFOR” and was thus able to realize the project.

Together with a residents’ working group, gruppe F Landschaftsarchitekten from Berlin developed a design concept for the areas over the course of several workshops. Inspiration for this came from the image of water droplets on a smooth surface. The excess soil from the excavation of infiltration troughs was modeled into circular mounds of various sizes. In this way, no soil had to be removed and a simple green lawn landscape with small pools and mounds was created, which changes its appearance depending on the water level. Small “puddles of water” in a green lawn landscape turn into large blue “lakes” with round green islands during heavy rainfall.

Scattered throughout this landscape are small “oases” for the residents with simple play elements, planting and recreational areas.

The project was developed by gruppe F Landschaftsarchitekten together with the Danish office Gaihede a/s and has been gradually implemented on site by the Danish office since 2018.

You can find the article on the Kurt-Schumacher Quartier in Berlin in G+L 04/2019.

In slow motion

Building design

by creating a subtle

Work on the central station in the Dutch city of Arnhem has now been going on for 20 years. As a result, skaters have appropriated the space.

Work on the central station in the Dutch city of Arnhem has now been going on for 20 years. Despite ongoing construction work, the area has been appropriated by a user group that the planner considers unpredictable and often finds no space: skaters. A success for the responsible landscape architects from Bureau B+B. But where did it come from?

Images: ©Hufton+Crow

The design of Arnhem station is the result of more than two decades of collaboration between the architects UNStudio and the landscape architects from Bureau B+B. It presented the planners with various challenges. Topographically alone: the station is located on the slope of the Veluwe massif and the planners had to overcome a height difference of 20 meters. They achieved this by creating a subtle, constantly changing landscape. The folded, undulating natural stone surfaces largely trace the terrain below, linking visitor flows and ensuring a smooth transition between the different elevation levels.

Pictures: Frank Hanswijk

If you are not continuing your journey immediately, you can also make yourself comfortable on the wooden benches that emerge from the edges of the sloping natural stone surfaces in the quiet corners of the station grounds. You don’t have to buy anything, as there is no obligation to buy anything to sit down in the rooms outside the station. This is one of the reasons why the Arnhem station forecourt is so lively. And it is in turn an explanation for the fact that these local people tend to belong to those population groups that are otherwise often pushed out of public spaces – such as older people, young people, skaters or homeless people.

The Arnhem train station shows this: The less the purpose of a public space is defined, the more opportunities users have to implement their own ideas. This is of particular benefit to population groups that are often deliberately excluded when planning public spaces. The square design also benefited from the fact that it took around two decades to implement. This allowed the user groups, who tend to be marginalized, to appropriate the space in the long term.

Curious? You can find the full article on Arnhem station in the February 2019 issue of G+L.

Translated from the English by Sigrid Ehrmann