Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners

Architects: Foster + Partners
Location: Munich, Germany
Design Team: Norman Foster, David Nelson, Stefan Behling, Christian Hallmann, Ulrich Hamann, Klaus Heldwein, Florian Boxberg, Leonhard Weil, Judith Kernt, Henriette Hahnloser, Eike Danz, Diana Krumbein, Simon Weismaier, Christopher Von Der Howen, Inge Tummers, Jörg Grabfelder, Katrin Hass, Tillmann Lenz
Area: 12,328 sqm
Year: 2013
Photographs: Nigel Young / Foster + Partners

Project Management: DU Diederichs Projektmanagement
Structural Engineering: Sailer Stepan & Partner GmbH
Mechanical Engineering: Ingenieurbüro Robert Ottitsch (HLS + RLT) + PEG GmbH (Elektro)
Quantity Surveyor: CBP Cronauer
Cost Consultant: Höhler + Partner
Landscaping: Burger Landschaftsarchitekten
Lighting Design: Ingenieurbüro Bamberger
Art Installations: ‘Wirbelwerk’ 2012 by Olafur Eliasson & ‘Lenbachhaus’ 2012 by Thomas Demand
Client: City of Munich, Cultural Department, Building Construction
Site Area: 4,000 sqm

The Museum’s historic buildings have been carefully restored and the exhibition spaces augmented by a spectacular new wing, which provides an ideal environment for viewing the magnificent ‘Blue Rider’ collection. As well as radically improving the buildings’ environmental performance, the remodelling has created a new entrance and social spaces, including a restaurant, terrace, education facilities and a dramatic full-height atrium, where the old is articulated within the new.

Built in 1891 as a studio and villa for the artist Franz von Lenbach, the Lenbachhaus Museum has been gradually extended over the last century. However, its buildings were in need of renewal and the museum lacked the facilities to cater to a growing audience of 280,000 people a year. Redefining circulation throughout the site, the project has transformed a complex sequence of spaces of different periods into a unified, legible museum that is accessible and open to all.

Peeling away the unnecessary historical accretions, a 1972 extension has been removed to reveal the wall of the original villa, which has been sympathetically restored in ochre render. The different historical elements are then unified along Richard-Wagner Street by a new gallery pavilion, containing two levels of exhibition space. The new building is intended as a ‘jewel box’ for the treasures of the gallery – it is clad in metal tubes of an alloy of copper and aluminium, their colour and form designed to complement the villa’s rich ochre hue and textured facades.

Inside the new building, a sequence of intimate galleries display the Museum’s internationally- renowned ‘Blue Rider’ collection of early twentieth-century Expressionist paintings, echoing the domestic scale of their original setting in the villa Lenbach. As many of the works of art were paintedin ‘plein-air’, indirect natural light has been deliberately drawn into the upper level galleries to create the optimum environment for their display.

A new entrance has been created adjacent to the restaurant, accessed via a new landscaped piazza to the east of the museum – this move reclaims the courtyard garden, turning it from a pedestrian thoroughfare into a tranquil space for visitors. The restaurant is open outside of the Museum’s opening hours and its seating continues outside, helping to enliven the surrounding streets and attracting new visitors into the galleries.

The new social heart of the building is a dramatic top-lit atrium, with ticket and information desks, access to a new temporary exhibition space on the ground floor and a grand, cantilevered stair to the upper level galleries. Clearly articulating the old within the new, its impressive volume incorporates the ochre exterior wall of the original villa and is scaled to accommodate large-scale works of art. The Museum commissioned the artist Olafur Eliasson for a site specific work titled Wirbelwerk. During the day sunlight washes the white walls via a long, slender opening at roof level and horizontal louvres cast changing patterns of light and shade within the space.

As well as repairing the fabric of the existing buildings, one of the main aims of the project has been to radically improve the museum’s environmental performance. A water-based heating and cooling system within the floors has been implemented – using significantly less energy than an air based heating, this represents an innovative step in a gallery context. Rainwater is also collected and recycled and lighting has been replaced and upgraded with low-energy systems.

Lord Foster:

“Our main challenge has been to maintain the same amount of exhibition area, within the museum’s footprint, while creating new circulation and visitor spaces. Given the way that the different parts of the museum had evolved, there was no such thing as a typical space – every corner is unique and required individual attention and different design decisions. This has been a fascinating process. Another important aspect of our design has been creating new opportunities for works of art to be exhibited outside the traditional confines of the gallery, such as in the atrium. This space developsthe idea of the ‘urban room’ – it is the museum’s public and social heart, and point of connection with the wider city.”

Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners © Nigel Young / Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Site Plan © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Ground Floor Plan © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners First Floor Plan © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Second Floor Plan © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Roof Plan © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Section © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Section © Foster + Partners
Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners Sectioned Axon © Foster + Partners

Lenbachhaus Museum / Foster + Partners originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 09 May 2013.

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House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau

Architects: Beer Architektur Städtebau
Location: Munich, Germany
Structural Engineering: Gordian Kley
Area: 440 sqm
Year: 2010
Photographs: Daniel Mosch

In terms of volume and height, the single-family home blends into the surroundings of the garden suburb of Harlaching with its well-spaced residential properties. The eave heights of the neighbouring buildings are adopted in the protruding upper floor; the width of the facade is stepped back accordingly. The house looks out on to the impressively green areas of the estate, the Athener Platz to the north and the verdant planted gardens to the south. Viewed from the neighbouring, very different properties to the east and west, the house appears rather solid, but is nevertheless sculptured to match the scale of these buildings. Due to the spatial concept of linked rooms and terraces, a generous contiguous space, incorporating indoor and outdoor areas, has been created making good use of the relatively small plot measuring around 650sqm.

The basement of the building includes a garage, utility rooms and two guest apartments. The ground floor accommodates a kitchen with a small table, a living room with an open dining area and a library with an open fireplace. The family’s more private rooms, a bedroom with a walk-in-wardrobe, a bathroom with a sauna and a small wellness area, and an office are located on the first floor.

The second floor is taken up by a spacious music room reaching from the front to the back of the house with a south-facing terrace; it is structured with a tiered skylight and floor-to-ceiling shelving for archiving sheet music. This room has been designed to meet specific criteria in terms of acoustics. All rooms have an outwards orientation to take in their particular views. All of the light and inviting interior rooms, at every level, enjoy the benefit of the parklike surroundings. Controlled ventilation, wall and underfloor heating systems, as well as acoustic features in most rooms contribute towards a pleasant and comfortable living environment.

The building has been designed as a composition of cubes which, in terms of scale, are derived from the surroundings. Embedded in the lustrous green of the gardens and surrounded by a framework of hedges, the house towers above the greenery like a stone fortress; however, when standing back, it appears to open up to its surroundings in an almost inviting manner. The building and the ground floor level, including all interior and exterior areas, have been conceived in stone. Maggia Gneiss from the Maggia Valley in Switzerland was selected as the material for these floor coverings and the facade. The house was developed as a concrete construction with a cladding of natural stone on all fascias and soffits.

For all vertical surfaces, exterior facades and bathroom interiors, the stone has been cut against the grain and has a striped appearance. All horizontal surfaces, such as the floor covering of the ground floor level, soffits in the facade and window sills, have been cut against the grain and have a cloudlike texture. Continuous layers of stone running around the entire building, combed corner details, minimised horizontal and vertical joints, soffits with solid slabs reflect the skill in the use of natural stone as a construction material. The interior walls have been fitted out with plain white panels. Cherry wood was chosen for the floor coverings on the upper storeys, the colouring and richness of its structure complementing the Maggia stone in a delightful way.

House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Section
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Site Plan

House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Mar 2013.

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House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau

Architects: Beer Architektur Städtebau
Location: Munich, Germany
Structural Engineering: Gordian Kley
Area: 440 sqm
Year: 2010
Photographs: Daniel Mosch

In terms of volume and height, the single-family home blends into the surroundings of the garden suburb of Harlaching with its well-spaced residential properties. The eave heights of the neighbouring buildings are adopted in the protruding upper floor; the width of the facade is stepped back accordingly. The house looks out on to the impressively green areas of the estate, the Athener Platz to the north and the verdant planted gardens to the south. Viewed from the neighbouring, very different properties to the east and west, the house appears rather solid, but is nevertheless sculptured to match the scale of these buildings. Due to the spatial concept of linked rooms and terraces, a generous contiguous space, incorporating indoor and outdoor areas, has been created making good use of the relatively small plot measuring around 650sqm.

The basement of the building includes a garage, utility rooms and two guest apartments. The ground floor accommodates a kitchen with a small table, a living room with an open dining area and a library with an open fireplace. The family’s more private rooms, a bedroom with a walk-in-wardrobe, a bathroom with a sauna and a small wellness area, and an office are located on the first floor.

The second floor is taken up by a spacious music room reaching from the front to the back of the house with a south-facing terrace; it is structured with a tiered skylight and floor-to-ceiling shelving for archiving sheet music. This room has been designed to meet specific criteria in terms of acoustics. All rooms have an outwards orientation to take in their particular views. All of the light and inviting interior rooms, at every level, enjoy the benefit of the parklike surroundings. Controlled ventilation, wall and underfloor heating systems, as well as acoustic features in most rooms contribute towards a pleasant and comfortable living environment.

The building has been designed as a composition of cubes which, in terms of scale, are derived from the surroundings. Embedded in the lustrous green of the gardens and surrounded by a framework of hedges, the house towers above the greenery like a stone fortress; however, when standing back, it appears to open up to its surroundings in an almost inviting manner. The building and the ground floor level, including all interior and exterior areas, have been conceived in stone. Maggia Gneiss from the Maggia Valley in Switzerland was selected as the material for these floor coverings and the facade. The house was developed as a concrete construction with a cladding of natural stone on all fascias and soffits.

For all vertical surfaces, exterior facades and bathroom interiors, the stone has been cut against the grain and has a striped appearance. All horizontal surfaces, such as the floor covering of the ground floor level, soffits in the facade and window sills, have been cut against the grain and have a cloudlike texture. Continuous layers of stone running around the entire building, combed corner details, minimised horizontal and vertical joints, soffits with solid slabs reflect the skill in the use of natural stone as a construction material. The interior walls have been fitted out with plain white panels. Cherry wood was chosen for the floor coverings on the upper storeys, the colouring and richness of its structure complementing the Maggia stone in a delightful way.

House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Section
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Site Plan

House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Mar 2013.

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House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau

Architects: Beer Architektur Städtebau
Location: Munich, Germany
Structural Engineering: Gordian Kley
Area: 440 sqm
Year: 2010
Photographs: Daniel Mosch

In terms of volume and height, the single-family home blends into the surroundings of the garden suburb of Harlaching with its well-spaced residential properties. The eave heights of the neighbouring buildings are adopted in the protruding upper floor; the width of the facade is stepped back accordingly. The house looks out on to the impressively green areas of the estate, the Athener Platz to the north and the verdant planted gardens to the south. Viewed from the neighbouring, very different properties to the east and west, the house appears rather solid, but is nevertheless sculptured to match the scale of these buildings. Due to the spatial concept of linked rooms and terraces, a generous contiguous space, incorporating indoor and outdoor areas, has been created making good use of the relatively small plot measuring around 650sqm.

The basement of the building includes a garage, utility rooms and two guest apartments. The ground floor accommodates a kitchen with a small table, a living room with an open dining area and a library with an open fireplace. The family’s more private rooms, a bedroom with a walk-in-wardrobe, a bathroom with a sauna and a small wellness area, and an office are located on the first floor.

The second floor is taken up by a spacious music room reaching from the front to the back of the house with a south-facing terrace; it is structured with a tiered skylight and floor-to-ceiling shelving for archiving sheet music. This room has been designed to meet specific criteria in terms of acoustics. All rooms have an outwards orientation to take in their particular views. All of the light and inviting interior rooms, at every level, enjoy the benefit of the parklike surroundings. Controlled ventilation, wall and underfloor heating systems, as well as acoustic features in most rooms contribute towards a pleasant and comfortable living environment.

The building has been designed as a composition of cubes which, in terms of scale, are derived from the surroundings. Embedded in the lustrous green of the gardens and surrounded by a framework of hedges, the house towers above the greenery like a stone fortress; however, when standing back, it appears to open up to its surroundings in an almost inviting manner. The building and the ground floor level, including all interior and exterior areas, have been conceived in stone. Maggia Gneiss from the Maggia Valley in Switzerland was selected as the material for these floor coverings and the facade. The house was developed as a concrete construction with a cladding of natural stone on all fascias and soffits.

For all vertical surfaces, exterior facades and bathroom interiors, the stone has been cut against the grain and has a striped appearance. All horizontal surfaces, such as the floor covering of the ground floor level, soffits in the facade and window sills, have been cut against the grain and have a cloudlike texture. Continuous layers of stone running around the entire building, combed corner details, minimised horizontal and vertical joints, soffits with solid slabs reflect the skill in the use of natural stone as a construction material. The interior walls have been fitted out with plain white panels. Cherry wood was chosen for the floor coverings on the upper storeys, the colouring and richness of its structure complementing the Maggia stone in a delightful way.

House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau © Daniel Mosch
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Floor Plan
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Section
House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau Site Plan

House with Music Room / Beer Architektur Städtebau originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Mar 2013.

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Don’t Mess With Architecture: Top 10 Razor Sharp Buildings

Architecture has been called a plastic art, but don’t let the term fool you. Rather than images of soft, malleable polyurethane, today we bring you architecture on point—sharp buildings that span the gamut from impossible knife-edges to bristling spikes. These unusual forms capture the imagination and catch the eye. But beware, in this case, looks can kill.

These buildings will having you thinking twice before you mess with architecture. Click through for the slideshow!

The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch

Architects: Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch
Location: Reichenbachstraße 27, Munich, Germany
Structural Planer : Sailer Stepan und Partner GmbH
Area: 11,890 sqm
Year: 2007
Photographs: Roland Halbe

The Idea
Our competition concept was the idea of a natural integration of the Jewish Center into the structure of the city through public space. Its public nature and openness can be experienced in a succession of squares, paths and passage-ways between the buildings and in their neighbourhood./ Community center, the chief synagogue and the Jewish Museum of the City of Munichare a balanced ensemble , in their own autonomy formulated and across their spaces correlated.

The synagogue, as the main building, is oriented towards east and stays free in the public space, with an closed stone base and a filigree glass steel construction, rising form its center. While the base reminds metaphorically of the temple Salomons , staying symbolically for the constancy, as a portative shell surrounding the prayers room, the metal mesh, glass and the construction network of the lantern relates to the filigree, portative “Stiftszelt” and the construction disbands in the transcendency the light.

The Jewish Museum of the City of Munich as the smallest cube communicates between Synagogue and community center, takes up the duality of the synagogue and invert it in materials, an introverted cube for the exhibition and a glazed ground floor. In the tension between fragility and mass, between openness and compactness, the building of the museum has its own independence and weight beside the cubes of the community center, and especially beside the base of the synagogue.

The structure is planned as a public meeting and exange place, as a mediator among the tree buildings on the square. The volume of the community center is fragmented in different cubes. The extensive space and utilization program had to be organised, with two undergrounds floors and six upper floors housing the youth – and cultural-centers, event rooms, dining facilities, school, daycare for children and administration offices.

The center is expressed in the differentiated buildings and materials, which establish relationships. The travertine is used in different shapes and forms: undressed natural stone, surrounding the base of the synagogue, polished stone at the museum and cut slabs are reflecting light and shadow on the facades and around the patios at the community center. The materiality with different structure of the surface until the detailplaning show the principle of coherence and autonomy.

The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch © Roland Halbe
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch Site Plan
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch Plan
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch Plan
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch Section
The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch Diagram

The Jewish Center in Munich / Wandel Hoefer Lorch + Hirsch originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 14 Jan 2013.

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Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur

Architects: Peter Haimerel Architektur
Location: Munich, Germany
Area: 7,500 sqm
Photographs: Gero Wortmann, Florian Holzherr

The appraisal of the façade intended the development of a façade concept for the planned heightening of the multi-story can park at ‘Salvatorplatz’ in Munich. In the context of the reconstruction of an office and garage building the multi-story car park has been increased by 21/2 floors. In the view of the historical surrounding and the inventory building, which stands under single monument and under monument protection and lies in embraced of an ensemble range, the organization of the new façade has been of great importance. The multi-story car park is situated in the midst of the old town of Munich. Leaving of the former medieval city wall and parts of the ‘Jungfernturm’ of 1430 directly border the multi-story car park. The existing multi-story car park of Franz Hart (1964/65) is oriented on the former city wall. The exposed lying brick wall has been absorbed and resumed.

The new steel façade structure of Peter Haimerl made of galvanized steel has been developed through computer generated expirations, which generate new order samples. A netlike network has been invented on the basis of 20 000 wands with the width of the thin formatted brick used at the inventory building and a constant staff length of 1.5 m.

The production of the façade of galvanized steel plates through computer-controlled plasma cut equipment corresponds to the idea of direct use of computer generated data. This means a direct transition of the draft data to machine production without the use of hand drawings of the designing architect.

The façade surrounds the heightening like a volume and a transparent covering for the new parking decks. The density of the structure decreases from down upward. As a result of the transparency of the structure and the gene constantness of the material the existing solidium remains untouched.

The inventory building are buildings of reinforced concrete skeletons, disguised with clinker brick-work The heightening of the multi-story car park is a structural steel work with reinforced concrete composite floors. The steel plates of the façade with the height of 8.50m and the width of 2.50 m are fastened at the structural steelwork of the parking deck.

Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Gero Wortmann
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Gero Wortmann
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Gero Wortmann
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur © Florian Holzherr
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur Plan
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur Plan
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur Site Plan
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur Section
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur Section
Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur Section

Salvartor Car Park / Peter Haimerel Architektur originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 29 Dec 2012.

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Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur

Architects: Peter Haimerl Architektur
Location: Munich, Bayern, Germany
Year: 2008
Photographs: Edward Beierle

In the latest thirties most of the old farmhouses in bavarian forest were destroyed, because of ignorance and the lack of appraisal adverse to the „old stuff“, maybe also to erase the contemporary witness of rather poor time.  The consequence was the deficit of architectural regional tradition – Space for the elderly can be found almost exclusively in farm-museum villages.

Therefore the architectural concept intends to keep the existance – as ruinous at it might be – and not to intervent into the structure of the old farmhouse “Celia”.

The rooms of the old building stay as they are, barely anything of the existance will be removed, that‘s imperative to the windows, the old plaster, the floor tiles and the other old fixtures.

Other material which would be removed will be recycled to produce furnitures.

Boxes out of concrete are going to be placed into a few central rooms, for example the old parlor, where the new life is going to take part.

Huge cutouts in the old unrenovated facade will remain visable. The new construction frames the old one, carries and protects it, the old building accomodates the new.

Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur © Edward Beierle
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur First Floor Plan
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur Ground Floor Plan
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur Site Plan
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur Section
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur Elevation
Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur Elevation

Harbour me, Celia! / Peter Haimerl Architektur originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 28 Dec 2012.

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