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Duisburg Housing, Duisburg,
Germany
1997-2001
Foster + Partners
The largest inland harbour in the world

Photos : Nigel Young, Foster & Partners
In 1991 the practice won an international competition to masterplan Duisburg
Inner Harbour. The scheme, set on an 89-hectare site, aims to connect
the inner city with the waters edge and with areas north of the harbour.
It includes new construction and selective refurbishment to provide residential,
social and cultural accommodation together with commercial and light-industrial
buildings.
The masterplan includes terraced housing with a total of 68 low-cost apartments.
They are built alongside canals, bringing the buildings into contact with
the waters edge. The majority are single-storey flats in two different
sizes (a 77 m2 one-bedroom flat and a 93 m2 two-bedroom flat). Larger
maisonette flats with double-height living spaces are located on the corners
where they overlook the new city-park and the new canals.
The flats are accessed via day-lit stairwells that offer direct access
to the south-facing communal garden at ground level. The end blocks are
fitted with lifts. The semi-basement car park is linked to the stairwells
and also houses refuse stores, plant rooms and individual storage spaces.

Photos : Nigel Young, Foster & Partners
The flats are north-south orientated. The living and dining area are located
on the south side and the bedrooms to the north. Each flat has a terrace,
balcony or veranda. The south-facing veranda spaces have been designed
to maximise the useable area in the flats. They are activated by opening
the 2.40-metre-wide, full-height sliding windows and by closing an internal
glass sliding wall, which acts as a thermal curtain. This prevents heat
loss during spring and autumn.
The glass area with external shading is maximised to the south to gain
passive solar energy during colder periods. The solid areas of the north
side are clad with ceramic tiles in a colour to match the bricks of the
existing grain store buildings opposite. District heating is provided
for heating; rainwater is collected and distributed to the nearby canal.

Photos : Nigel Young, Foster & Partners
Client: THS, Essen
Consultants: Ingenieur Buro Dr Meyer, Buro Cosanne, Haustechnik H/L/S
+ Electro, Copijin
Duisburg Housing
architects : Foster + Partners
Duisburg
building : Köppersmöhle Museum
German Architecture
Architecture in cities near Duisburg:
Düsseldorf Buildings
Essen Buildings
World Architecture : e-architect
- a guide to key buildings across the globe
Gelsenkirchen Stadium
Comments / photos for the Duisburg Inner Harbour Masterplan Architecture
page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Duisburg Inner Masterplan
Buildings - page: adrian welch / isabelle lomholt
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