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Building for
Bouwkunde, Holland, Dutch Project, Images, Design, News, Property
Building for Bouwkunde
Holland
TU Delft Architecture Faculty : Entry by Monolab, The Netherlands
BUILDING FOR BOUWKUNDE
Open competition for a new faculty building for the department Bouwkunde,
TU Delft
client: TU Delft
design: Monolab

TRIPLE LANDSCAPE
Our design has been triggered by four agendas: sustainability,
education, urbanism and architecture.
Architecture was not our first point of departure. As a result we
designed a Building for Bouwkunde which we consider more an environment
than a building. In order to go beyond the limitations of architecture
it behaves intensely and it communicates through three landscapes:
the first on ground level connects with the context, the second is
elevated upside down and the third makes an outdoor archipelago on
the roof surface.
clusters
The morphologies of the three landscapes are made through
twelve program clusters, shaped like hills or clouds: seven on the
main floor, four elevated and in the center the design studios: connecting
all. Landscape 1 at ground level is free-flow and has the seven more
public clusters: administration, supermarket, cafe, test labs, library,
main lecture hall and bookshop. The topsides of these hills are used
as multifunctional floors. Landscape 2 has four elevated hanging
hills or clouds that hold the Faculties of Architecture, Urbanism,
Building Technology and Housing&Real Estate. The lecture halls
are spread over all four faculties. Landscape 3 makes an outdoor archipelago
with 5 decks on the top of the design studios and the four departments:
a mini camping (for first year students with no proper accommodation),
lounge terrace, flower field, sports and meadow with cows or sheep.
epi-center
The epi-center of the complete scheme, shaped as a maelstrom, is made
of the design studios (studio spaces, modelling, computing, sketching,
printing). All and everybody come together here. It has, like all
other faculties, an atrium that supplies daylight and which is the
major connector for the whole building. It brings all people from
the entries and free flow ground floor to the higher floor levels.
Its floorplans can have different lay outs between open floor plans
with studio spaces for 12 students to cell-like lay-outs, as long
as the partitions are made of glass.

heart beat
Contact between all clusters is maximised through the use of glass
in all faculties and service programs. The clusters are recognised
through a finishing of clear glass that colours through LED systems
which are located in the floor edges. In this way the building is
lika an organism, made of twelve slowly pulsating and glowing
colourful islands with a heart beat. The furniture has landscape
characteristics, like for example in the library: its lazy hill
is surrounded by a field of bookshelves and desks.
education - parallelism - intensity
We strive for a building that allows many types of education and maximum
contact between its people. It is flat and extended to minimise the
number of floors. Interaction is triggered through 1. the transparency
and visibility of faculties and design studios and through 2. the
open floor fields with flexible glass partitions combined with 3.
a free-flow circulation. This free flow circulation operates very
well if it creates circuits and avoids dead ends. All clusters make
contact between parallel worlds and raise intensity between the individual
and collectives, between students and tutors, between design and model
making, between sketching and software, between education and market,
between faculties and visitors.

sustainability
The building produces more energy than it consumes because of its
flatness and its six climate control systems: 1. a transparent roof
surface of Photovoll glass that generates electricity and blocks the
incoming heat, 2. a steel column-beam structure transporting warm
and cool air, 3. a concrete ground floor slab, climatised through
warm and cool water, 4. a climate facade, capturing heated air and
the option to enhance oxygen levels through plant life in the facade
zone, 5. a heat exchange unit with heat pump (parking level), 6. a
deep underground energy storage system for warm water in winter and
cool water in summer. Most building elements are made from recyclable
materials (glass, steel and concrete). Rain water from the roof surface
can run down the facades and collected at its lower profile although
it needs severe filtering because of the bad air quality in the Randstad.
The design provides a closed ground assessment: the outdoor
parking at -1 level is excavated and its soil is shaped into lazy
hills in the surrounding landscape. This landscaping fits the Mecanoo
masterplan for the Mekelweg zone.
urbanism
The building is located on the former Bouwkunde site. There is no
reason to locate it more central because the department is so completely
different from the other TU departments. Its main entry is now towards
the Mekelweg tram stop. The entry of the former Bouwkunde now makes
the side entry in this design, linked by the diagonal path of the
Mecanoo masterplan. The parking for vehicles and bicycles is open
air and below the building to serve as foundation, to create shading
and to save plot size. The excavation of the parking has natural edges
that allows a variety of daylight.

architecture
The structural carriers of the building are as neutral as possible.
All facades are made of transparent glass. The envelopes of the clusters
are mainly of glass (coloured by LEDs) and some of concrete
as slopes to walk on. Both concrete and glass surfaces have a finish
of a corded sand pattern, like on beaches. This pattern makes the
slopes and planes of the landscapes readable. All this results in
a neutral but exciting architecture of light, shadow and colour.
© MONOLAB ARCHITECTS
Building for Bouwkunde competition images / information from Monolab
Architects
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TU
Delft Architecture Faculty Building - Building for Bouwkunde competition
University Buildings
Delft Buildings
Delft Technical University Library

photograph : Christian Richters
Delft Building architect
: mecanoo architecten
The Architecture Faculty at Delft Technical University destroyed by
a fire 13 May 2008. Collections by Rem Koolhaas and MVRDV destroyed
Delft Station by Mecanoo architecten
Amsterdam Architecture
Delft Architects
Maritime
Network Holland

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Building for Bouwkunde Holland Architecture
page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Building for Bouwkunde Design Entry : page
- adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
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