SCL – Holzmassivhaus / MIND Architects Collective


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank


© Nick Frank


© Nick Frank


© Nick Frank


© Nick Frank

  • Architects: MIND Architects Collective
  • Location: Mainz-Laubenheim, 55130 Mainz, Germany
  • Architects In Charge: Julia Buschlinger, Jan Dechow
  • Area: 233.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Nick Frank
  • Structural Engineer And Distributor Of Klh In Germany : ABA Holz van Kempen GmbH

© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

From the architect. Bischofsheim is a community of around 12,000 located in a central suburban area between Mainz, Wiesbaden and Frankfurt.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

An ecological new solid wood structure (cross-laminated timber manufactured by KLH Austria) with flexible usage was to be built on a small plot with two old garages in a densely built up town centre.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The dream of the client was also to move his office back to where he lived and to nevertheless take advantage of all the urban possibilities of modern, contemporary work (co-working) in a small space and in a small village. In addition, the new structure was expected to offer cost security, also with a view to a potential later sale or a reduction in the size of the office. Sustainability was to be a key consideration in all areas.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The first step was to outline and discuss in detail the complex requirements of the client, as well as to meet the urban development and building code regulations and to make use of their potential.


Section

Section

One requirement was that the new structure be built on the right boundary directly beside the neighbouring building in line with the housing row. To the rear, approval from the neighbours would have been required for the development on the boundaries.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The new structure had to be built directly on the street, while access to the building had to be set back from the road.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The guiding principle for the design was flexibility and spatial relations both inside and out within a small space.

The building itself was to have the appearance of unobtrusive but carefully thought-out modern simplicity and a reduction of materials, allowing a versatile and flexible appearance. A form that is not abstract and that does not fight for attention, but meshes into the urban context.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The building was designed in such a way that public and private rooms were created. The heart of the building with its bookshelves filling a wall across three stories fulfilled building code regulations and provided a direct connection to the neighbouring building.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The building jumps back and creates a private, protected inner courtyard, which opens up the view when entering the building through the transparency of the floor-to-ceiling windows on the ground floor and offers unexpected sight lines.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

The ground floor with its open areas, which can be divided with curtains, is used as a common area for meetings, a kitchen and workshops.


Ground Floor Plan

Ground Floor Plan

The first and second floors, on the other hand, offer the individual open offices a sense of intimacy and focus. The intermediate areas are used as communication areas, with the heart of the building with its communal storage area forming the central link.


© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

From a long-term perspective, the interior with its separate cores is designed in such a way that the house could be easily transformed into a pure or partial residential building at any time.


1st Floor Plan

1st Floor Plan

The deliberately exclusive use of wood as a construction, insulating and aesthetic material both inside and out was intended to meet the guiding principles of sustainability and simplicity.



© Nick Frank

© Nick Frank

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Luigi Rosselli Architects Designs a Cottage for a Young Family in Sydney

Hill Top Cottage by Luigi Rosselli Architects (5)

Hill Top Cottage is a residential project designed by Luigi Rosselli Architects. It is located in Lower North Shore, Sydney, Australia. Hill Top Cottage by Luigi Rosselli Architects: “Weaving architectural heritage with contemporary design and lifestyle is a practice that rewards with surprises and characterful places. In a conservative residential pocket close to North Sydney, a workers cottage perches on top of a hill looking south-east towards striking views of..

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Selected: Finally sunlight by AdnanBubalo

Saturday tour to Mt Visocica (1960m) Bosnia and Hercegovina. After many hours mountain hiking to see the sun really makes you feel great.

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5 Reasons You Shouldn’t Feel Guilty About Emotional Pain

When we are coping with emotional pain, past or present, or body is forced to endure a tidal wave of experiences. We lose our appetite, behave strangely, and definitely are not our usual cheery selves. It’s too bad, but it’s ok because it’s all par for the course and we all have to go through it. Sometimes when we see our tough friends soldier through something tragic we envy their strength and perseverance, but we do not see what is happening behind closed doors. We cannot pretend to be strong forever, and it is in the privacy of our homes where most people unwind and succumb to stresses.

Pain is something we cannot rush, it is something we have to deal with individually and personally. One coping mechanism to overcome emotional defeat is to try and use the critical part of our brain. Especially after it’s been a while, we start thinking quickly, over analyzing and trying to reason our way through things. We can’t do this though because our heart has no room for critical analysis!

7_valuable_life_lessons_the_pain_of_grief_can_teaches_us1. Take your time

After we’ve been dealing with stress for a long time, we get tired of it and wonder is this still happening? The truth is, yes. Some people take an extra long time to get over something, and it could be you and there is nothing wrong with that. People deal with break-ups and losses differently, but we are strong and are all survivors. After such a long time though, we try to rationalize our way through it, but it just makes us more stressed out because we cannot reason our way out.

That’s because we’re not supposed to. As my grandfather used to say, “take your time,” and I stand by that advice. When we are stressed out every day feels like a year, but luckily we have thousands of days to go through. Our brain needs to keep up with life while our heart lingers on. Let it linger on – it will heal itself when it’s the right time, but forcing it to happen by using your brain will only compound things.

2. There is no schedule for healing

Just like there is no rulebook for life, there also is no schedule allotment for times of healing and recovery. Alcoholics Anonymous has been a great resource to help people overcome drinking problems using a scheduled system, but we do not have the same luxury for emotional pain. We are all on our own schedule here, and we should respect that. If someone says, “oh, are you still on about that?” you have every right to be. We need our own time to heal, and are allowed to use it.

3. Do not try to rationalize your feelings

Feelings are not like the weather. They cannot be measured, treated or examined, really. They are personal and volatile. The feelings that you have are the same ones everyone else feels, but at different degrees. Some days we wake up tired, others energized. Sometimes we feel like we need to cry for no reason, or we cannot fall asleep because we are thinking so much. The point is, do not ask yourself why it is happening, you just have to go with it. If you start trying to rationalize it, you will just perpetrate a downward spiral of self loathing and over-analyzing. Save yourself the stress by just relaxing and let the feelings go when they’re ready to. You cannot control the unexplainable.

4.  The heart needs time to heal

Strong losses sometimes take years to overcome, and if it has to be that way, then that’s the way it has to be. It’s just important not to feel like you have to rush it. Some of my friends still talk about their girlfriends or boyfriends from years ago. It’s not because they still have crazy feelings about those old relationships, but those relationships continued to shape their lives and the course of their history for all the consecutive years after.

It’s not about hanging on to baggage, but about recognizing the lasting impact of decisions and consequences in life. No one lives through a perfect life without a few mishaps, and to some degree these experiences should be taken in stride. They should be expected in life, and perhaps the ramifications are worth considering. They allow us to reflect on our feelings in personal confidence, and help us to not do the same things again. Some heartbreaks are worth hanging on to – we can learn so much about ourselves.

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Jeremy Corbyn continues Labour reshuffle – Politics live

Rolling coverage of all the day’s political developments as they happen

9.09am BST

Jeremy Corbyn has acquired a reputation for holding reshuffles that run for almost as long as The Mousetrap and the current one, which started on Thursday, is still underway. We are told we will get some new names later today. Having finalised his shadow cabinet at the end of last week, late yesterday afternoon Corbyn announced 21 other frontbench appointments. For the record, here is the full list.

Shadow Minister for Labour – Jack Dromey MP

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