WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group

Architects: Ippolito Fleitz Group
Location: Dammtorstr, Hamburg, Germany
Architect In Charge: Ippolito Fleitz Group
Design Team: Peter Ippolito, Gunter Fleitz, Moritz Köhler, Michael Bertram, Markus Schmidt, Timo Flott
Area: 145 sqm
Year: 2012
Photographs: Benjamin Nadjib

WakuWaku has relaunched itself as a fast food restaurant and organic food store in one. The brand values ‘organic’ and ‘sustainable’ remain the clear focus of all communication.

The large, open façade provides an unrestricted view of a space, which is almost entirely encased in solid wood panelling, creating the ideal stage to display the products in the WakuWaku world. One side wall with floor-to-ceiling shelving integrates both display compartments and glass-fronted refrigerators. A long central counter and parallel niches provide seating spots for all communicative requirements. Different shapes of chair break up the seating landscape and hark back to the original WakuWaku outlet – as do the chair legs, dipped in the WakuWaku corporate colour. The untreated wood dominating the space is synonymous with the chain’s ecological sustainability. The rough wooden surfaces contrast with the intricate wall sketches created by Chris Rehberger using taut strings and the canopy of fine wire lamps.

WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Benjamin Nadjib
WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group Floor Plan

WakuWaku / Ippolito Fleitz Group originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 24 May 2013.

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Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten

Architects von Gerkan, Marg and Partners (gmp Architekten) have won the first prize in the competition for the extension of Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters in Hamburg’s HafenCity. The new building designed for the Hamburg-based, tradition-rich trading company impressed the jury as “an independent urban-planning and architectural contribution characterized by timeless, harmoniously self-contained architecture.” Viewed from the northwest, the new extension is a companion piece to the Maritime Museum, with the two buildings flanking the “Heinemann-Speicher” in the middle. From the Ericus Bridge, the new construction highlights the corner of the ensemble on Shanghaiallee and makes a characteristically urban statement. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Gebr. Heinemann, originally founded as a ship supplier in Hamburg’s Speicherstadt district in 1879 and now a well-known, modern Hanseatic trading house on the international travel market, invited eight architectural firms to participate in the competition. The task was to extend the two existing warehouse buildings between the Magdeburg Harbor and Shanghaiallee to create an “ensemble of three striking blocks that form a harmonious triad representing the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.” The new structure directly adjacent to the headquarters and including underground parking, six floors of offices, and two recessed floors, will be built in line with the “Sustainable Construction in HafenCity” gold standard.

Like the Gebr. Heinemann company, the design reflects both the traditional solidity of the warehouse district and a flexible adaptation to modern requirements of HafenCity. Although a glazed structure connects it to the “Heinemann-Speicher,” the extension is independently useable with an inviting transparent space on the ground floor. Besides serving as an employee entrance, it can accommodate commercial spaces, an arcade, or a café. On the upper floors, users have maximum flexibility in floor plan design.

All the requisite functional areas are compactly organized around the central access area and the available floor space can be used for an open-plan office, individual offices, or anything in between. Like the main building and Maritime Museum, the design is characterized by multistory windows, a vertical façade relief, and brickwork typical of the region. The area freed by the two recessed floors forms two spacious roof terraces/roof gardens, mediates between the different eaves heights of neighboring structures, and adds an urban tone through dramatic cubature.

Architects: gmp Architekten
Design: Volkwin Marg and Jürgen Hillmer, with Stephanie Joebsch
Team: Andreas Weihnacht, Achim Wangler, Tanja Hütter, André Wegmann, Katja Mezger
Structural Design: Weber-Poll, Hamburg
Services: Winter-Ingenieure, Hamburg
Fire Safety: hhp, Berlin
Client: Gebr. Heinemann Trading Company
Gross Floor Area: 10,000 m²
Competition Status: 1st prize
Year: 2013

Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten site plan
Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten elevation 01
Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten elevation 02
Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten elevation 03

Gebr. Heinemann Headquarters Extension Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 20 May 2013.

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Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group

Architects: Ippolito Fleitz Group
Location: Hamburg
Architect In Charge: Ippolito Fleitz Group
Design Team: Peter Ippolito, Gunter Fleitz, Tilla Goldberg, Christian Kirschenmann, Tim Lessmann, Alexander Fehre, Christine Ackermann, Roger Gasperlin, Katja Heinemann
Area: 520.0 sqm
Year: 2011
Photographs: Zooey Braun

The SPIEGEL Group, whose stable includes Germany’s most important news magazine Der SPIEGEL, moved into its new publishing house in Hamburg’s HafenCity development. We were commissioned to create a new, 520 sqm large employees’ canteen for the building. The legacy building’s famous canteen was designed in 1969 by Verner Panton. This inheritance represented a particular challenge.

The employees’ canteen was and is a calling card of the SPIEGEL Group, reflecting its journalistic philosophy as much as its culture of dialogue. It is a space that meets all functional demands while creating a strong visual impact to form a truly distinguishing space. In so doing it supports the mature culture of communication within the company and in a grand gesture transmits these values to the outside world.

The ceiling design is the distinguishing moment of the space. It is formed of 4,230 circles made of micro-perforated aluminium. The tables are placed within the space in three large groups in loose arrangements and so provide an organic counterpoint to the polygonal floor plan. Through a zigzagging glass façade a separate area can be formed at one end for discrete events.

Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group © Zooey Braun
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group Floor Plan
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group Floor Plan
Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group Elevation

Spiegel / Ippolito Fleitz Group originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 17 May 2013.

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Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten

gmp Architekten just won the first prize in the competition for the design of the Elbbrücken Underground station. The genius loci of this over-ground station is determined by its position directly at the river Elbe, the future dense urban development, and by the historic Elbbrücken bridges with their conspicuous shallow steel arches. Characterized by simple and clearly structured access principles, the complex difference in levels between the terrain and the platforms is cleverly dealt with inside the building. More images and architects’ description after the break.

The station will be located in the future district of Elbbrücken, at the eastern end of Hamburg‘s Hafencity, and will, at least for the time being, be the end station of the recently opened U4 Underground line. In resonance to the bridges, an impressive steel structure consisting of curved steel girders supports the new station, creating a structure which newly interprets the dynamic design principles of the historic bridges. The external roof construction underscores the visual presence of the structure; the crosswise layout of the frames results in a grid-type system and stabilizes the steel arches.

A glass façade suspended on the inside protects the building against the weather. The light-flooded station opens interesting vistas towards the local urban ‚Am Baakenhafen’ center, to the prominent tower blocks and the Elbe bridges.

A ribbon section for lights and media will stretch the entire length of the station between the platform level and the booking hall. The lighting will generally be subdued and unostentatious, underscoring the character of the structure.

Architects: gmp Architekten
Location: Hamburg, Germany
Design: Volkwin Marg, Stephanie Jöbsch
Partner: Jürgen Hillmer
Project Management: Stephanie Jöbsch
Design Team: Achim Wangler, Bernd Kottsieper, Katja Mezger
Structural Design: schlaich bergermann and partners
Client: Hamburger Hochbahn AG
Stats: Competition winner
Year: 2013

Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten Courtesy of gmp Architekten
Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten site plan
Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten floor plan

Elbbrücken Underground Station Winning Proposal / gmp Architekten originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 04 May 2013.

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World’s First Algae Bioreactor Facade Nears Completion

BIQ – the world’s first algae powered building – is set to be completed in Germany later this month. Built for the International Building Exhibition (IBA) in Hamburg, this zero-carbon apartment complex will sport a bright green facade-cum-algae farm, while its interior proposes a radical new theory on how we will live in the near future.

More about BIQ after the break…

At about the same size as bacteria, microalgae can produce more biofuel per hectare than alternative crops. This joint venture between Splitterwerk Architects, ARUP, Colt International and Strategic Science Consult marks the first time algae-reactors have been fully integrated into the fabric of a building.

On the south-east and south-west facades, there is a second skin of hollow glass panels containing micro-algae farms. Here, the algae floats around basking in the sunlight which hits the structure, while being fed on a diet of carbon dioxide and nutrients by a network of pipes. Photosynthesizing and growing, the algae-pulp can then be periodically harvested and fermented in an external biogas plant to generate energy.

Aside from producing energy and performing the usual job of heat and sound insulation, the facade is characterized by other valuable traits. Heat from excess sunlight, not needed by the algae, is collected and can be stored in brine-filled boreholes, to be used for space and water heating. In addition, the algae provides adaptive shading throughout the year; the more intense the sunlight gets, the more algae grows inside the facade and the more shade is provided.

Also proposed by BIQ is a new model of living, which is based on the idea that the distinction between workplace and home is ever thinning, making traditional rigid apartment layouts somewhat obstructive. Two of the building’s fifteen apartments have no separate rooms, instead they are large versatile spaces, which the resident can configure “on demand” to something which suits them.

Algae is quickly becoming a new buzzword in the fields of bio-architecture and energy production. As the likes of BP and Exxon put their money behind algae-fuel projects, algae-facades are increasingly being seen as a solution to the problem of sustainably powering buildings. Aside from being able to produce biomass and hydrogen, they can also be used to detect pollution and absorb carbon dioxide while releasing oxygen. Several conceptual projects have been proposed by architects, such as a plan to re-skin Chicago’s Marina Towers with algae or ARUP’s inclusion of algae-pods in their vision of the ‘Skyscraper of 2050′.

via Good, IBA Hamburg 

World's First Algae Bioreactor Facade Nears Completion BIQ via GOOD
World's First Algae Bioreactor Facade Nears Completion BIQ via GOOD
World's First Algae Bioreactor Facade Nears Completion BIQ via GOOD

World's First Algae Bioreactor Facade Nears Completion originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 04 Mar 2013.

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Herzog & de Meuron’s Elbphilharmonie to be Completed by 2017

Sitting idol since November 2011, Herzog & de Meuron’s long-running Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, Germany, has left residents wondering when will the music ever begin?

First envisioned back in 2003, the enormous crystalline glass structure stands nearly complete on top a historic warehouse on the edge of the River Elbe. Rising costs, delayed schedules and legal issues with the contractor, have plagued this magnificent concert hall with controversy. However, according a report in the German news magazine Der Spiegel, contractor Hochtief has initiated a new deal to ensure the completion of the building.

A revised contract, which is expect to adjust the architect’s fee’s to €94 million (€17 million over the original project cost), has projected Elbphilharmonie will be completed within the next four years. The news is bittersweet, as the architectural community and the residents of Hamburg have been waiting years for this highly anticipated concert hall to be complete, yet they cringe at the news of an overblown €575 million price tag.

via BDOnline 

Image via Flickr user Martin Wippel, licensed under Creative Commons. 

Herzog & de Meuron's Elbphilharmonie to be Completed by 2017 originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Feb 2013.

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Herzog & de Meuron’s Elbphilharmonie to be Completed by 2017

Sitting idol since November 2011, Herzog & de Meuron’s long-running Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, Germany, has left residents wondering when will the music ever begin?

First envisioned back in 2003, the enormous crystalline glass structure stands nearly complete on top a historic warehouse on the edge of the River Elbe. Rising costs, delayed schedules and legal issues with the contractor, have plagued this magnificent concert hall with controversy. However, according a report in the German news magazine Der Spiegel, contractor Hochtief has initiated a new deal to ensure the completion of the building.

A revised contract, which is expect to adjust the architect’s fee’s to €94 million (€17 million over the original project cost), has projected Elbphilharmonie will be completed within the next four years. The news is bittersweet, as the architectural community and the residents of Hamburg have been waiting years for this highly anticipated concert hall to be complete, yet they cringe at the news of an overblown €575 million price tag.

via BDOnline 

Image via Flickr user Martin Wippel, licensed under Creative Commons. 

Herzog & de Meuron's Elbphilharmonie to be Completed by 2017 originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Feb 2013.

send to Twitter | Share on Facebook | What do you think about this?

Herzog & de Meuron’s Elbphilharmonie to be Completed by 2017

Sitting idol since November 2011, Herzog & de Meuron’s long-running Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, Germany, has left residents wondering when will the music ever begin?

First envisioned back in 2003, the enormous crystalline glass structure stands nearly complete on top a historic warehouse on the edge of the River Elbe. Rising costs, delayed schedules and legal issues with the contractor, have plagued this magnificent concert hall with controversy. However, according a report in the German news magazine Der Spiegel, contractor Hochtief has initiated a new deal to ensure the completion of the building.

A revised contract, which is expect to adjust the architect’s fee’s to €94 million (€17 million over the original project cost), has projected Elbphilharmonie will be completed within the next four years. The news is bittersweet, as the architectural community and the residents of Hamburg have been waiting years for this highly anticipated concert hall to be complete, yet they cringe at the news of an overblown €575 million price tag.

via BDOnline 

Image via Flickr user Martin Wippel, licensed under Creative Commons. 

Herzog & de Meuron's Elbphilharmonie to be Completed by 2017 originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Feb 2013.

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