Sustainable Plan for Carlsberg City Evokes Historical Significance of Copenhagen


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

The new development plan for Copenhagen’s Carlsberg City aims to embrace the closeness of old Copenhagen and institute an urban center evocative of the historical style of Scandinavia and Europe at large. White Arkitekter has been tasked with achieving these goals with their design for Humlehaven, a residential and commercial plan that emphasizes sustainable design and integration with the existing site.


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

The plan needed to meet the challenge of reconciling the increased density of modern Carlsberg with its historical legacy, as the Carlsberg brewery is a well-established institution that has promoted the development of Copenhagen over time. To this end, the architects chose clay bricks that are not only reminiscent of the local materiality but are in fact recycled from demolished nearby buildings. This practice has limited the total environmental footprint of the project.


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

The bricks are arranged in large planes that contrast with existing facades and oriented to allow natural light into the apartments. Based on the assembly from the original brewery grounds, the windows provide views to the city.


Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Courtesy of White Arkitekter

Humlehaven includes a green inner courtyard that connects each of the residential buildings. The hard surfaces reflect ambient light around the space, while vegetation filters excess solar radiation and foot traffic. Inside the apartments, the warm wooden material palette contrasts with the robust concrete semi-private circulation space. The living spaces thus allow residents to simultaneously retreat to the private warmth of their homes and interface with the urban environment.

News via: White Arkitekter

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Blue Lagoon Moon by AJC ajcann.wordpress.com …

Blue Lagoon Moon by AJC ajcann.wordpress.com http://flic.kr/p/qvyq6h

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Lexington, Kentuckyphoto via deyaniria

Lexington, Kentucky

photo via deyaniria

5 Free Ways to Get More Out Of Life Starting Today

When I was a wee little tot, my mom and I were homeless. We were sitting on a sidewalk dirty and hungry  and she was having a terrible time while I was giggling at my “spaceship stick,” waving it through the cold, rainy air.

With tears in her eyes, she jokingly says to me, “how can you be so happy?” I drop my stick, look over at her, and say, very matter-of-factly, “because it just feels better, mom.”

3_body_language_adjustments_that_will_change_your_lifeThe state of your livelihood is all a matter of your state of mind. Having little to do with outside circumstances and everything to do with how you perceive and look at the world around you. Your world, literally, is what you make it up to be.

Here, I will share 5 simple ways to change your mind and get much more out of life starting today.

1. Visualization

Our eyes act more like projectors, then lookers. Many would argue (including more and more emerging scientists), that the images we hold in our minds act as “pre-matter” for what’s to be materialized in the world outside of ourselves.

When we imagine, in our mind’s eye, what we want to create and manifest in our lives, our images work as cogs in a reality machine, creating these images in real life.

Have you ever had a wish come true, to find out that maybe it wasn’t exactly what you wanted, and you didn’t feel as great as you thought you would after having received it?

Sometimes we are unaware of what will make us the absolute happiest. For that, I suggest that while visualizing, visualize positive, happy emotions, rather than specific events.

Imagine yourself yelling and throwing your arms in the air in celebration, dancing in a bright light, or being confident and filled with joy.

To crank it up a notch, don’t just visualize, FEEL. Put yourself so much in the state of mind that you begin to feel the feelings associated with your visualizations. Joy, clarity, confidence, abundance, whatever it is.

The more you can feel the emotions, the quicker they will be manifested into your life. Plus, doesn’t feeling good emotions feel good, anyways? Emotions are powerful.

An important thing to note is to not over-do it. Don’t spend your entire day visualizing and thinking about the future. By doing this, you could easily be missing out on your present life and taking it for granted, forgetting what you already have to be happy and feel good about.

2. Appreciation

Sometimes our perception is skewed and we can easily fall into negative mindsets that literally block out all the beauty around us. Have you noticed the difference between when you are walking down the street on a day you feel bad, as opposed to on a day you feel good?

When you feel good, you see so much more beauty around you. The plants are more vibrant. The sky is saturated. The people are smiling. The birds are chirping.

The street you walk down is the same street, either way, it doesn’t have to change to be made into a better street. The first step to make the street a better street is to change your mindset about the street.

Make a list, mental or physical, of all the things to appreciate about you, your life, and those around you. You can even begin as simply as being grateful for your eyes, for giving you the miraculous gift of sight.

The more you bring awareness to the beauty of what is already all around you, the more beauty will be generated into your life.

3. Live Your Story

I oftentimes think of my death bed (a daring thought, I know), and when I do, I can only think about what type of life I will look back on. What kind of story do I wish to tell? What type of life will I wish to have lived? What Natasha will I have wanted to be?

It’s important to keep this in mind, and what’s even more important to think about, as daunting as it is, is that you have no idea when you will be laying there, reflecting on your life.

We are not promised to live to any certain age. After all, when we die all of our material things go to someone else (or the dump). So the only things that are truly ours are the memories we have and the stories we have to tell.

So start living and creating your story, right now. Take the road trip, talk to the girl, take the leap.

4. Your Troubles Are Your Teachers

Rather than looking at your troubles as tormentors, look at them as lessons. What am I learning from this? What is it teaching me? In what ways am I growing? For example, instead of getting upset at the long line in the post office, look at the line as a teacher of patience.

Suffering is only suffering if it is unjustified. If your muscles are sore and burning because you are at the gym, you might not perceive this experience as suffering because you know that the pain means you are growing.

We can use this as a metaphor for the fact that any time we are uncomfortable, it means that we are growing. If you can justify your suffering (i.e., gain something from the experience), all of the sudden it transforms into an opportunity for growth.

Our journey here on Earth is not to suffer, but to learn and grow.

5. Pleasure vs. Happiness

The difference between pleasure and happiness is one of the most valuable distinctions I have ever made in my life. Pleasure, on one hand, comes from things outside of yourself, and the feeling is constantly fleeting. You are always having to fill yourself with these outside things to keep feeling good.

For example, driving a nice car, watching an exciting movie, or eating a delicious meal. All of these things feel good, in the moment.

Many people trick themselves into believing that they are happy because they fit the socially constructed profile of “having it all.” A nice house, a successful job, steady income, fancy car, big screen TV, you name it.

Happiness, on the other hand, is a state of mind. It’s a constant, independent of outside variables. The oh-too-common phrase, “things that make us happy,” should very well be replaced by, “thoughts that make us happy, or, perspectives, or states of mind, that make us happy.”
Happiness is a choice, and something we must experience from the inside out in order to experience it at all.

The quickest, most-powerful, and most cost-effective way to start getting more out of your life, right now, is to simply change your mind.

The post 5 Free Ways to Get More Out Of Life Starting Today appeared first on Change your thoughts.

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CASA O’ / Despacho Arquitectos HV


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom


© Paul Czitrom

  • Collaborators : Enrique Guinchard, Benjamín Rocha, Jorge Gil, Merle Castañeda Andrés Rodriguez Castro
  • Structure : EA Ingeniería
  • Installations : MEPU&WATER, Carlos Beltrán, Vicente Peña.
  • Carpentry: Víctor Ramírez
  • Ironwork: José Lira
  • Gardening: Entorno Taller de Paisaje
  • Heating System: ECOVENT
  • Solar Panels : EVA
  • Sound: VFX Digital

© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

The fusion of exterior and interior areas, the integration of the surrounding and the landscape are main subjects of “Casa O'” which is located in one of the most exclusive areas of Mexico City.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

 The aim for the specific design with our clients is to unfold an intimate landscape, in which different places and sceneries coexist, seeking to achieve functionality within an harmonious architectural with spaces surrounded by lush vegetation.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

Once you go through the hermetic facade of the street, it establishes a route that connects the habitable interior areas with the exterior. The generous and accessible interior facade allows interior spaces to extend to visual limits of the house, managing to dilute the garden and integrate it with these areas.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

First Floor Plan

First Floor Plan

© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

Una vez traspasada la hermética fachada de la calle, se establece un recorrido conectando las áreas habitables interiores con el exterior. La fachada interior generosa y accesible permite que los espacios internos se extiendan hasta los límites visuales del terreno, logrando que el jardín se diluya y se integre a estas áreas.


© Paul Czitrom

© Paul Czitrom

Los materiales utilizados en la construcción, en su mayoría naturales complementan la imagen del proyecto haciendo que la arquitectura genere múltiples sensaciones entre las texturas de los acabados, las tonalidades que se funden con la vegetación y el uso mesurado de la iluminación, teniendo como resultado un proyecto sobrio y moderno.

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3 Winners of the 2016 Young Talent Architecture Award Announced


Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The Fundació Mies van der Rohe has announced the three winners of the inaugural Young Talent Architecture Award (YTAA) 2016. Established this year to “support the talent of recently graduated Architects, Urban Planners and Landscape Architects who will be responsible for transforming our environment in the future,”  9 finalists were selected from a shortlist of 30 projects, which was then narrowed down to 3 winners.

Winners

A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The project proposes a simple and sustainable way to react to the dynamics of the demand of accommodation for tourists. The Jury appreciated the ‘glocal’ thinking which supports the local community in obtaining the tools to face the urban, economic and social changes that the city is undergoing.


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


A symbiotic relation of cooperative social housing and dispersed tourism in Habana Vieja / Iwo Borkowicz, Faculty of Architecture, University of Leuven. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

S’lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Housing is a key topic in Europe today and the project understands the impermanence of our habitat. The Jury considered the importance of understanding architecture as an open process in an ever-changing environment and the potential to create a real time experimental FabLab connected to an innovative housing experience.


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


S'lowtecture. Housing structure in Wroclaw-Zerniki / Tomasz Broma, Faculty of Architecture, Wroclaw University of Technology. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The project addresses the topic of cohabitation and how borders (both political and geographical) can be transformed in order to make this cohabitation possible. This proposal approaches the role of design as a political tool, as a spatial practice within a new emergent socio-political space. The Jury was positively impressed by the amount of overlapping layers of complexity created and by the skillful designs and modeling to explain a newly imagined world.


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe


GeoFront. Strategic development plan for the frontier territories / Policarpo del Canto Baquera, Madrid School of Architecture, Polytechnic University of Madrid. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Finalists

Death and Life of a Small French city, Alix Sportich du Réau de la Gaignonnière / Alice Villatte from School of architecture of Marne-la-Vallée, France


Death and Life of a Small French city, Alix Sportich du Réau de la Gaignonnière / Alice Villatte from School of architecture of Marne-la-Vallée, France. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Death and Life of a Small French city, Alix Sportich du Réau de la Gaignonnière / Alice Villatte from School of architecture of Marne-la-Vallée, France. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Brewing Democracy: The Assembly of Le Balai Citoyen in Ouagadougou / Lorenzo Perri from AA, London, UK


Brewing Democracy: The Assembly of Le Balai Citoyen in Ouagadougou / Lorenzo Perri from AA, London, UK. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Brewing Democracy: The Assembly of Le Balai Citoyen in Ouagadougou / Lorenzo Perri from AA, London, UK. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Genesis of a place towards the project / David Gonçalves Monteiro from FAUP, Porto, PT


Genesis of a place towards the project / David Gonçalves Monteiro from FAUP, Porto, PT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Genesis of a place towards the project / David Gonçalves Monteiro from FAUP, Porto, PT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in a cultural environment / Clàudia Carreras Oliver from ETSALS, Barcelona, ES


Living in a cultural environment / Clàudia Carreras Oliver from ETSALS, Barcelona, ES. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in a cultural environment / Clàudia Carreras Oliver from ETSALS, Barcelona, ES. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in offices. The alive triangle of Bordelongue in Toulouse / Jaufret Barrot, Cinthia Isabel Carrasco Fuentes from ENSA, Toulouse, FR


Living in offices. The alive triangle of Bordelongue in Toulouse / Jaufret Barrot, Cinthia Isabel Carrasco Fuentes from ENSA, Toulouse, FR. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Living in offices. The alive triangle of Bordelongue in Toulouse / Jaufret Barrot, Cinthia Isabel Carrasco Fuentes from ENSA, Toulouse, FR. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Subversions Minhocao / Laura Abbruzzese from DA, Ferrara, IT


Subversions Minhocao / Laura Abbruzzese from DA, Ferrara, IT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

Subversions Minhocao / Laura Abbruzzese from DA, Ferrara, IT. Image Courtesy of Fundació Mies van der Rohe

The YTAA 2016 Jury consisted of: 

  • Jose Luis Vallejo, Architect, Principal at Ecosistema Urbano, Madrid (President)
  • Inge Beckel, Architect, Editor at Swiss-Architects.com, Zurich
  • Michał Duda, Architecture Historian, Curator at the Museum of Architecture, Wroclaw
  • Juulia Kauste, Sociologist, Director at the Museum of Finnish Architecture, Helsinki
  • Triin Ojari, Architect, Director at the Museum of Estonian Architecture, Tallinn 

For more information on the award, check out the website, here.

News via Fundació Mies van der Rohe.

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Selected: FALL ON THE FARM by raulweisser

AN OLD BARN ON A FOGGY AUTUMN MORNING

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How to Send Your Spirit from Zero to Sixty-Part II

You’re reading How to Send Your Spirit from Zero to Sixty-Part II, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’re enjoying this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

how to find fulfillment

how to find fulfillment

continued from part I

I spent decades figuring out lifework that brought me joy and fun and fulfillment.

You don’t want to wait decades. You want a map to your best future NOW.

You want a powerful, well-cared for, and efficient vehicle for your journey.

You need a mission statement, and I promised to help you craft one.

So, get ready!

Remember, you don’t need an exact destination for lifework, just a region, a country, an area. Don’t limit potential joy, creativity, and fun.

Again, what does a good mission statement include?

1-It must be about you as Human Being as much as a human doing, positioning you for constant growth.

2-It must be a prospect that brings you joy every day.

3-It must involve work that’s so immersive, you lose track of time.

4-It must, after a specific and reasonable amount of training, be something that you’re efficient at, (corresponding to the 80/20 rule, such that you can do 80% of your most important work in 20% of the time needed).

5-It must provide a balanced lifestyle with your most important values, and pervasive health in every respect, in your relationships, your physical well-being, and your emotional and spiritual situation.

6-It must give you plenty to work with and plenty of choices on how to SUPPORT your mission, but specific enough so that you know when you’ve gone off track.
So, those qualities above support you as a Human Being.

Your Mission Statement from the Ground Up:

Where to begin?

First, do what I call the “Magic Wand” exercise. Close your eyes, and grasp the power to spend every day EXACTLY IN THE WAY(S) THAT BRING YOU HAPPINESS.

Okay, let’s say you came up with ten ways. Write them down.

That’s the “floor” of your mission statement document.

Okay, take those floor items (“Activities”), and see if any of them go together. Cluster any that do go together, but don’t get rid of any that stand on their own.

Now, you have your rooms. Let’s call those “Categories”.

Now, more specifics.

Want to work with a lot of people?

Want employees?

Want to work in a particular part of the world? No particular place?

Want to work the same time every day?

Let’s call those issues “Qualities”, or to continue with the metaphor of where you are living, the “Lifestyle”.

Okay, you’ve got the “Floor” of “Activities”.

You have the “Rooms”, or “Categories”.

You have the Qualities, or the “Lifestyle”.

The BIG One:

Now, it’s time for your “Mission”, if you choose to accept it!!

What sort of work combines, from the bottom up, your floor, your rooms, your lifestyle, that, in total, makes your “Area”, or, if you prefer, your “Neighborhood”?

This part is straightforward, but not “simple”.

How I Did It:

Here’s what I did.

Activities: I realized that I loved writing of all kinds and creativity that went with it, from blog posts, to direct mail, to fiction, poetry, playwriting, even writing speeches. But I also loved interviewing people, chances to be on the stage, opportunities to perform, even direct.

Rooms: online presence (for blogs); marketing (direct mail, speeches); creative writing (plays, poetry, fiction); screenwriting, television work/media/podcasts.

Qualities: portability, free time to be with family and friends, autonomy, flexibility of opportunity, time to travel.

Mission: I realized that ONE thing tied all this together, what made me happiest since I was a kid: TELLING STORIES OF EVERY KIND. All these activities supported living in that neighborhood. For me, that’s “True North”; I can always reclaim ownership of my life after even the shortest of detours.

So, Why Wait?

I know this can seem overwhelming, but if I can do it, so can you. Besides, aren’t you worth it?

Why should you work for companies that have mission statements when you put off your own?

How much longer are you going to let the clock tick down on that most precious of resources, time?
Remember, these ticks are the bomb of inaction, when you get to the end of your life and you discover you were busy, but ultimately unproductive.

Do you want that explosion of unhappiness at the end of your life, knowing that you knew or could have known where True North was, but you turned away from the quest and ultimately, the destination?

The answer to your purpose, like all the best and most important answers to your life, lies within.

Go find it!

(p.s. to read Part I click HERE)


Lars Nielsen is a free-lance copywriter with a unique selling voice from the cadence and imagery developed through poetry, playwriting, fiction, radio, and comedy.  Go to http://ift.tt/2aI2xgg and see how Ultimate Influence Copywriting can tell compelling stories for your business, your speeches, your ideas, and your life.

You’ve read How to Send Your Spirit from Zero to Sixty-Part II, originally posted on Pick the Brain | Motivation and Self Improvement. If you’ve enjoyed this, please visit our site for more inspirational articles.

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Watching the weather at Yosemite National Park in California can…

Watching the weather at Yosemite National Park in California can yield some amazing views, like sun rays bursting unexpectedly from clouds. Of this moment, photographer Beth Young says, “The rising sun briefly broke through the clouds and illuminated the low-lying mist on the valley floor.” Sunrise photo courtesy of Beth Young.

Hockey Club Oranje-Rood Clubhouse / Diederendirrix Architecture & Urban Development


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen


© Pieter de Ruijter


© Pieter de Ruijter


© Arthur Bagen


© Arthur Bagen


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen

Eye-catching, Functional and Sustainable

Diederendirrix architecture & urban development designed a striking pavilion for hockey club Oranje-Rood. The large canopy built from laminated wooden joists in a triangular grid, supported by a few pillars, is extraordinary. The structure extends from the outside into the inside and creates a special interior with an unobstructed view of the fields. This year, Oranje-Rood originated from a merger between the successful topclass sports club Oranje-Zwart (first division champions for the last three years) and recreational sports club EMHC. This new start called for a new, modern clubhouse. The pavilion was festively opened in September 2016.


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen

Splendid View Over All Hockey Fields

The triangular building with rounded corners is fitted in on a wedge-shaped area between the hockey fields. The pavilion is located on a plinth consisting of an overgrown slope on one side and a stand with 1600 seats on the other side. Underneath, comfortable changing rooms and a physiotherapy room were built, which meet the requirements of a top-class sport accommodation.

On the raised level the luxurious canteen is located, from where you can view the club’s eight hockey fields. The very large canopy will always keep you dry while watching the matches outside. There is room for a business club on the pavilion’s level.


© Pieter de Ruijter

© Pieter de Ruijter

Smart and Sustainable Building

The smart façades consist of light grey, preserved pine slats. The vertical slats accentuate the rounded corners. The inside is also dominated by concrete and wood, including in the long bar. As commissioner, the city of Eindhoven set high sustainability goals. The EPC (Energy Performance Coefficient) is 0.3 due to the building´s triangular shape, the solar panels on the roof and the high insulation levels.


© Pieter de Ruijter

© Pieter de Ruijter

Frans van Duivenboden, president of Oranje-Rood: “Not the largest clubhouse of the Netherlands, but definitely the coolest.”


Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

Product Description. We gave the clubhouse a distinctive triangle shape to fit it carefully in the context, in this way you have a beautiful view on all the surrounding hockey fields from the building. We rounded the corners and gave the facade a certain softness, because we didn’t want to make the building to hard and detached.


© Pieter de Ruijter

© Pieter de Ruijter

Therefore we chose to give the facade a wooden covering. However, not only a uniform flat finish with shelves, but we’ve added vertical ribs at a distance of 132mm from each other, that form a consistent vertical grid over the facade. Because the view of the building is almost always from an angle, the facades and the receding canopy have a tactility that makes the pavilion much kinder and gentler.


Section

Section

A very light gray color enhances the lightness and friendliness of the building. There is however consciously decided not to use a grey aging natural wood. This would after some time give a splotchy image, especially at the transitions between the canopy and facade. Hence the choice not to use hardwood, but modified pine wood treated with a light gray stain as to remain its beauty in the future.


© Arthur Bagen

© Arthur Bagen

The facade builder hanged the boards and slats in prefabricated panels to the rear structure, whereby the fixation was on the backside of the panels, therewith leaving the rhythm of the ribs undisturbed by visible fasteners.

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