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Almere Vision 2030, Architects, Building, Images, Housing, Stadgenoot,
News
Almere Vision 2030, The Netherlands : Architecture
Contemporary Dutch Residential Development, Holland by MVRDV
City of Almere
and MVRDV present Vision 2030
(Rotterdam, July 1st , 2009) Dutch new town Almere plans to grow with
60,000 houses, 100,000 work places and related facilities. Consequentially
Almere will become the fifth largest city of the Netherlands in an
effort to relief and to offer new qualities to the urbanised west
of the Netherlands. MVRDV was commissioned to collaborate with the
city to design a concept structure vision to accommodate this growth.
The growth will take place in four main areas: Almere IJland, a new
island off the coast in the IJ-lake, Almere Pampus, a neighbourhood
focused on the lake and open to experimental housing, Almere Centre,
an extended city centre surrounding the central lake, and Oosterwold,
an area devoted to more rural and organic urbanism. Together the proposals
form the new framework to accompany the growth of the city until 2030.
Together with the entire board of city councilors and the mayor, Adri
Duivesteijn, city councilor of Almere and Winy Maas of MVRDV, presented
the concept structure vision to the ministers of Transport, Public
Works and Water Management (V&W), Camiel Eurlings and minister
of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment, Jacqueline Cramer
(VROM) on June 26th. The design of IJland has been a collaboration
with Adriaan Geuze of West8 and William McDonough of McDonough and
Partners.

"The structure vision for Almere is more than an urban masterplan
"
said Adri Duivesteijn, city councilor of Almere, "
it describes
how the city can develop in economic, cultural and social terms. The
expansion is not a quantitative effort. Even though the number of
60,000 new homes is impressive, the main objective is the addition
of new qualities. Almere wants to serve the demand of the Randstad
and at the same time needs the chance to develop into an ecologic,
social and economically sustainable city".
The Axis: Nowadays Almere is a city with 185,000 inhabitants, 30 years
ago it was an empty stretch of land reclaimed from the sea. The growth
will preserve and further expand Almere's model of a poly-nuclear
city. It will diversify the existing city by adding various densities,
programs and characters that do not yet exist in the current situation.
The vision consists of four major development areas, each with their
own character, logic and identity. These new area developments are
linked by an infrastructural axis which connects the metropolitan
area of Amsterdam with Almere. Between the two cities Almere IJ-land
(referring to IJ-lake) is a connector, literally as well as economically
and culturally. The axis then leads to Almere Pampus, the Centre of
Almere and Oosterwold in the east, and will in the future be continued
to link Utrecht.
Almere IJland: Together with Adriaan Geuze of West8 and William McDonough,
MVRDV worked on the unique opportunity to design a series of urban
and nature reserve islands with the primary objective to improve water
quality in the IJ-Lake, which is urgently needed. Combined with the
new railway connection to Amsterdam, this offers in addition the potential
to propose a living area with 5,000 up to 10,000 homes. IJland combines
ecological and infrastructural interventions with the possibility
to live, work and recreate in a natural riparian environment. The
island could as well host special programs in the future, for example
as part of the possible Dutch bid for the 2028 Olympic Games.
Almere Pampus: This area will combine the feeling of a coastal town
with high density and make room for 20,000 homes; all streets within
Almere Pampus will lead to the boulevard at the lake. The existing
maintenance harbor will be reused for leisure and floating villages.
There will be a new train station with a plaza at the coast.
Almere Centre: The current centre will grow and extend to the south
bank of Weerwater, turning the central lake into Weerwater-park and
become in time the cultural and economical heart of the city. On the
junction of the new axis, the motorway and the railway connection,
the motorway will be covered making an adjacent development of up
to 5,000 homes, offices and public amenities possible. The central
station will be developed into an economical hub and will be surrounded
with new program.
Almere Oosterwold: This large area in the east offers room for up
to 18,000 new homes and a variety of functions such as business and
retail centers. It will be developed following individual and collective
initiatives, from small to large scale, with plots that are always
surrounded by nature development, urban agriculture or local parks.
The area will reserve areas for future development after 2030.
The vision 2030 is not a blueprint but a flexible development strategy.
Duivesteijn: "It is a framework which can be filled in by the
people of the city. By remaining flexible we create possibilities
to adjust the plans to future opportunities." Almere wants to
develop according to this structure vision in order to become an ecological,
social and economically sustainable city. Large investments in infrastructure
are needed to connect the city and its anticipated total of 350,000
inhabitants to its surroundings and to Amsterdam.
Winy Maas will remain involved in the further development of the concept
structure vision in a supervising role. MVRDV has a long history of
engagement with Almere: Earlier projects include two studies on new
ways of organic urban development for Almere Hout and Almere Homeruskwartier,
a study for the A6 Boulevard and the study for Pampus harbour, a neighbourhood
of 500 floating dwellings. MVRDV's Jacob van Rijs currently works
on part of Olympiakwartier, a dense urban district of in total 220.000m2
mixed use with public facilities.
Almere Vison 2030 architect
: MVRDV
Almere Olympiakwartier
Masterplan : information from MVRDV 12 Sep 2008
Almere Olympiakwartier
First concept model. The MVRDV concept is comparable to a bead necklace
which can be composed of a variety of different or repeating elements:

picture © MVRDV 2008
Almere Architecture
Dutch Buildings
Almere Building
Almere
ALMERE, located just 35 kilometres from the Dutch capital of Amsterdam,
offers an ideal climate for working and living for many people and
companies from the Randstad conurbation, which is bursting at the
seams, and the rest of Holland, thanks to its spacious layout and
its greenbelt so rich in waters. In Almere of the total surface of
24,876 hectares 40% is agricultural land, woodlands, parks or nature
reserve, making it a very green and blue city when compared with other
large municipalities. Some three to four thousand new residents arrive
each year. Facilities in the field of education, welfare, culture
and sport track the growth as closely as possible.
More information about the new town Almere: http://english.almere.nl/
Stadgenoot works in Amsterdam and Almere. It seeks to enhance the
quality of homes and of life in Amsterdam. By contributing here Stadgenoot
steadily levers housing standards in the city. Meanwhile, with an
eye for individual aspirations and the social mix, Stadgenoot builds
towards a sustainable environment for all. In total Stadgenoot, with
465 personnel, develops and manages just over 31,000 homes and 1,800
commercial units.
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MVRDV
MVRDV was set up in Rotterdam (the Netherlands) in 1993 by Winy Maas, Jacob
van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries. MVRDV produces designs and studies in the
fields of architecture, urbanism and landscape design. Early projects such
as the headquarters for the Dutch Public Broadcaster VPRO and housing for
elderly WoZoCo in Amsterdam lead to international acclaim.
The office continues to pursue its fascination and methodical research on
density using a method of shaping space through complex amounts of data
that accompany contemporary building and design processes. MVRDV first published
a cross section of these study results in FARMAX (1998), followed by a.o.
MetaCity/Datatown (1999), Costa Iberica (2000), Regionmaker (2002), 5 Minutes
City (2003), KM3 (2005), which contains Pig City and more recently Spacefighter
(2007) and Skycar City (2007). MVRDV deals with global ecological issues
in large scale studies like Pig City as well as in small scale solutions
for flooded areas of New Orleans.
The products of this approach vary and range from buildings of all types
and sizes, to urban designs to publications and installations. Realized
projects include the Dutch Pavilion for the World EXPO 2000 in Hannover,
an innovative business park 'Flight Forum' in Eindhoven, the Silodam Housing
complex in Amsterdam, the Matsudai Cultural Centre in Japan, Unterföhring
office campus near Munich, the Lloyd Hotel in Amsterdam, an urban plan and
housing in The Hague Ypenburg, the rooftop - housing extension Didden Village
in Rotterdam, the cultural Centre De Effenaar in Eindhoven, the boutique
shopping centre Gyre in Tokyo, Veldhoven's Maxima Medical Centre and the
iconic Mirador housing in Madrid. MVRDV also has a long history of working
on urban visions and urban planning, both theoretical as in terms of realisations.
Current projects include various housing projects in the Netherlands, Spain,
China, France, Austria, the United Kingdom, USA, Korea and other countries,
a television centre in Zürich, a public library for Spijkenisse (Netherlands),
a central market hall for Rotterdam, a culture plaza in Nanjing, China,
large scale urban masterplans in Oslo, Norway and in Tirana, Albania, a
masterplan for an eco-city in Logroño, Spain and an urban vision
for the doubling in size of Almere, Netherlands.
The work of MVRDV is exhibited and published world wide and receives international
awards. The 65 architects, designers and staff members conceive projects
in a multi-disciplinary collaborative design process and apply highest technological
and sustainable standards.
Almere office building
Almere Masterplan architect
: Rem Koolhaas
Almere Arts Centre architects : SANAA
Buildings by MVRDV
Shenzhen 4 in 1 Towers
Tirana Lakeside Competition
Liuzhou Project China
Westerdok Amsterdam

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the MVRDV Almere Vision 2030 page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Almere Vision 2030 - page : adrian welch /
isabelle lomholt |
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