Small brochure – great advice

Building design
Photo: Tile of Spain

Photo: Tile of Spain

Ceramic tiles offer numerous advantages over other floor and wall coverings – do you already know them all? Tile of Spain supports the consultations of its retail partners with a small free information brochure.

Ceramic tiles offer numerous advantages over other floor and wall coverings – do you already know them all? Tile of Spain supports the consultations of its retail partners with a small free information brochure.

Thanks to their elegant patterns, fascinating surface textures and trendy colors, Spanish ceramic tiles open up almost unlimited possibilities for transforming living spaces and outdoor areas into individual oases of well-being. However, it is not just the sheer inexhaustible variety of designs that speaks in favor of Spanish tiles. Fired ceramics also score points for their healthy living and ecological properties. It is particularly durable and easy to clean, is made from raw materials that are available in almost unlimited quantities and can be largely recycled. And because ceramic does not emit any harmful substances, it creates the best conditions for a healthy living environment.

All convincing arguments that can be an important guide for customers when deciding on a wall or floor covering. Tile of Spain now summarizes the most important arguments for the use of ceramic tiles in a handy mini-brochure in a simple and comprehensible way. The free information brochure is already available from many retailers in their tile showrooms or to take away from the information counter. Up to 100 copies of the handy reference book can be ordered easily by e-mail from Tile of Spain.

You can find more information here.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Well protected

Building design
Dresden Police Administration Office CODE UNIQUE

Photo: Robert Gommlich

Only in exceptional cases are visitors from the public likely to have the pleasure of seeing the Dresden Police Administration Office up close. Embedded in a historical ensemble on the grounds of the Dresden riot police, the building is a modernist structure that aims to master the balancing act between formal independence and architectural restraint.

Only in exceptional cases are civilians likely to be able to enjoy a close-up view of the Dresden Police Administration Office. Embedded in a historical ensemble, the Dresden Police Administration Office is a modernist building that aims to master the balancing act between formal independence and architectural restraint.

Stauffenbergallee in the northern part of the city of Dresden is characterized by extensive barracks buildings. They were built together with the former Parade Street in the last third of the 19th century and were used for a time as quarters for the Red Army and the National People’s Army. However, the military use of the area between Hechtpark and Hellersiedlung is now long gone. Today, the Dresden-Nord police station is based there, as is the 1st division of the riot police. The main customs office and the prison are also located just around the corner.

In the long term, a central location for the Dresden police is to be created here. The expansion of the property to include three hybrid buildings for the Dresden Police Administration Office with workshops and office space was one of the first steps in this direction. The Dresden office Code Unique was responsible for the architecture. The Dresden firm designed the main building with the character of an industrial building. The building stands confidently in front of the existing historical buildings. At the same time, however, it appears restrained. The planners created a building envelope with a cladding of vertical panels, which are fanned out in some areas like a slatted curtain.

Some of the panels are made of insulated and translucent cast glass. This helps to provide the building with daylight. This is because the first floor houses workshops for the vehicles of the Dresden riot police and offices. The architects also use the numerous skylights to illuminate the workshops. The weapons and equipment workshops moved in above the vehicle workshops.

Plans: CODE UNIQUE Architekten GmbH

The use of translucent, vertical glass panels extends into the interior of the Dresden Police Administration Office. The panels can also be found as cladding for staircases.

You can find more information about the project on the Code Unique website.

Fancy a slightly different workplace? Studio Aisslinger has designed a colorful office landscape for the Berlin bag label Loqi.

Luma Arles: Atelier of the South

Building design

PHOTO: Remi Benali

The spectacular new building of the Luma Foundation in Arles by architect Frank Gehry is both a museum and a studio building.

The spectacular new building of the Luma Arles Foundation is a work of art for art: Frank Gehry’s tower is both a museum and a studio building. It is the highlight of an art and cultural area that Luma founder Maja Hoffmann has realized over the course of 15 years.

Arles and art – the first thing that comes to mind is, of course, van Gogh, who sought to realize his dream of a studio in the south in an artistic partnership with Gauguin. However, his stay in Arles turned into a debacle for van Gogh. Not only did his collaboration with Gauguin end in a rift – in Arles he also began to suffer increasingly from delusions, until he finally had to go to the mental hospital in nearby Saint-Rémy.

It almost seems as if Maja Hoffmann had set out to heal van Gogh’s fate in Arles in retrospect. Hoffmann, who comes from the Basel industrialist dynasty of the same name, is one of the world’s most important art collectors and patrons. She has been a cultural initiator and patron of the arts in Arles for almost 20 years. In 2004, she founded the Luma Foundation there, which promotes and commissions contemporary art.

Three years later, Maja Hoffmann began a working process together with the architect Frank Gehry, the curator Hans-Ulrich Obrist and a number of important contemporary artists. Together, they developed ideas for a new type of art and cultural center for the 21st century. Hoffmann chose the “Parc des Ateliers” as the location for this project. This is the site of the SNCF railroad depot on the edge of the historic old town of Arles, which has been abandoned since the 1980s. The historic workshop buildings have been renovated in recent years by architect Annabelle Selldorf. The building now houses exhibition spaces, artists’ studios and apartments as well as a restaurant.

The redesign of the “Parc des Ateliers” has now been crowned with the opening of the “Tower”, a 56-metre-high exhibition and studio building designed by Frank Gehry. The initial preparatory work for the project began back in 2009 and construction work began in 2013. The result is unmistakably the work of Gehry – who, however, combines the free forms so characteristic of his work with enormous geometric volumes. The architect designed a three-storey high plinth zone as a huge glass cylinder. A reference to the Roman amphitheater in Arles.

The actual tower rises out of the cylinder. Its side facing the city center presents itself as a shiny and wildly moving metal skin with rectangular window cores. On the side facing away from the city, on the other hand, the tower appears to be composed of two cubic bodies that stand next to each other at a slight angle. Inside the glass cylinder, the volumes of the various galleries appear to be freely distributed throughout the space. This form of organization is similar to that found in Gehry’s Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. There are also several studio spaces for artists here. The tower, on the other hand, mainly houses the foundation’s administrative offices. A public viewing terrace forms the upper end.

Numerous works of art, including those by Philippe Parreno and Olafur Eliasson, are an important part of the tower. They were created especially for this location. Incidentally, Atelier Luma is also part of the Luma Foundation’s work. This workshop has developed various sustainable construction and furnishing elements made from local materials for the project: the building includes textile wall cladding made from bioplastics, tiles dyed with algae and acoustic elements made from sunflowers.

What can an anti-Gehry look like? The Broad Museum shows how.