Space for enjoyment – The stone in July 2024

Building design
Cover picture: Gabriel Büchelmeier
Cover picture: Gabriel Büchelmeier

In STEIN 7/24, we look at the new focal point in the living area: the kitchen. Kitchen blocks made of unusual stones are increasingly being used in them. For example, we show a kitchen-living room in Styria, where the interior designers have placed a block of “Golden Viper”. The dark granite with golden veins is a real eye-catcher in the open space. Another kitchen block made of Patagonia granite is another such eye-catcher, adding its own elegant accent to an otherwise restrained apartment.

The kitchen has long since shed its traditional role as simply a place to cook. Today, it is much more the center of life and a central place for social interaction. Kitchen blocks that separate the kitchen from the living area are particularly popular. This trend is interesting for stonemasons in that natural stone is increasingly being used in upmarket interior design.

Starting on page 6, we present a whole series of unusual kitchen solutions made of natural stone. We start with two examples from the Austrian stonemasonry company Breitwieser in Tulln. The interior designers have placed a block of “Golden Viper” in a kitchen-living room in Styria. The dark granite with golden veins is a real eye-catcher in the open space. Another kitchen block made of Patagonia granite is another such eye-catcher, adding its own elegant accent to an otherwise restrained apartment.

From page 12, the South Tyrolean stonemasonry company Bagnara opens its order book for us and presents proven classics and new trends. On display are superlative stones that turn every kitchen into something very special.

Steffen Würstel, Managing Director of MCR-Steine GmbH in Römhild, Thuringia, shares his exclusive customers’ new kitchen designs with you in the STEIN interview. Just this much in advance: there are no limits to the stonemason’s craft in kitchen construction. On the contrary.

Enno Steindlberger, Director of the Institute for Stone Conservation (IFS) in Mainz, talks to us from page 24 onwards about the cooperation between monument conservation and university research in stone conservation. The IFS sees itself primarily as an advisory body for monument conservation and does not undertake any commissioned work.

We hope you enjoy reading STEIN.

Your stone editors Redaktion@stein-magazin.de

The magazine is available here in the store!

Click here for our latest issue, the industry report June 2024.

POTREBBE INTERESSARTI ANCHE

Instagram top 5 in September 2021

Building design
Schwere Reiter opens in Mahlknecht Herrle's creative quarter in Munich

The Schwere Reiter by Mahlknecht Herrle stands out in the Kreativquartier in Munich with its facade made of sheet piling. Photo: Oliver Jaist

Which projects are the most popular on our Instagram account? We have compiled the Instagram top 5 from September 2021.

You can find all the projects and information that we announce on social media at baumeister.de. But which images and projects are the most popular on our Instagram account? We have compiled the top 5 articles from September 2021.

>> Icefjord Information Center (Ilulissat, Greenland) by Dorte Mandrup

>> “Schwere Reiter” cultural spaces (Munich) by Mahlknecht Herrle Architekten

>> Police administration office (Dresden) by Code Unique

>> “Houses of the Year 2021” winner “Haus Alder” by Fuhrimann Hächler and all other single-family houses

>> Romantic Museum (Frankfurt am Main) by Christoph Mäckler

More top 5 articles? Here you can find our social media overview.

You don’t know our Instagram account yet? Then take a look. We look forward to seeing you.

Wind and space at the airport tower

Building design
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The expansive prairie landscapes in Alberta, where the wind whips across the vast expanses of grass and grain fields and forms the snow into bizarre drifts in winter, are so familiar to the architects from the Edmonton office Dialog that they were inspired by this natural spectacle in their design for the new tower at Edmonton International Airport: Undulating, three-dimensional ribbons wrap around the eight-storey, almost elliptical structure. They are interrupted by recessed ribbon windows with views of the Alberta landscape. Behind the façade are around 12,000 m² of offices, retail and restaurants.

The tower owes its eye-catching effect to the irregularly high and wide façade bands in the large herbaceous system. The architects opted for “Rheinzink-prePatina blue-grey”, as this surface picks up on the play of colors of the Canadian landscape and blends in with the ensemble of existing airport buildings. The positive properties of the material were also convincing: in addition to being maintenance-free and durable, the architects were also interested in its good formability.

Just as the wind leaves its mark on the landscape, each part of the complex façade was to be unique. The shapes of the bands and the plans for the steel substructure were developed using a computer-aided 3D model. To test how the materials could be processed, a test section was produced on a scale of 1:1 before assembly.

RHEINZINK GmbH & Co KG
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45711 Datteln

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