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DETAIL 2021 04. Refurbishment and Conversion - Sanierung und Umnutzung

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DETAIL 2021 04. Refurbishment and Conversion - Sanierung und Umnutzung

Uitgever:DETAIL

  • Paperback
  • Engels, Duits
  • 104 pagina's
  • 2 apr. 2021

New uses for Old Buildings

If old buildings could talk, they would have myriad tales to tell. The renovations and conversions in this issue of DETAIL magazine reveal quite a lot about their history. In most cases, they were accompanied by a dramatic change of use: the Schönburg in Bern, once the headquarters of the Swiss Post Office, was transformed into a residential and hotel complex by Theo Hotz Partner and Marazzi + Paul. In Memmingen, Heilergeiger adapted a villa for use as a daycare centre, while in Barcelona, the Fabra i Coats textile factory now houses 46 artists’ apart­ments and a sports hall according to a design by Roldán & Berengué.

The two residential buildings featured in this issue show that radical interventions in the building fabric may be needed even if the building is used for the same purpose. In Terrassa, Spain, H Arquitectes reactivated a terraced home that was vacant for over 100 years. Adjaye Associates undertook a similar feat with Mole House in London, which now serves as the home and studio of artist Sue Webster. Rotterdam-based architect and expert in adaptive reuse, Wessel de Jonge states in an interview with Anneke Bokern in this issue, “It’s as important to me that a building can be well utilized as whether the heritage lobby thinks it’s perfect.”

New uses for Old Buildings

If old buildings could talk, they would have myriad tales to tell. The renovations and conversions in this issue of DETAIL magazine reveal quite a lot about their history. In most cases, they were accompanied by a dramatic change of use: the Schönburg in Bern, once the headquarters of the Swiss Post Office, was transformed into a residential and hotel complex by Theo Hotz Partner and Marazzi + Paul. In Memmingen, Heilergeiger adapted a villa for use as a daycare centre, while in Barcelona, the Fabra i Coats textile factory now houses 46 artists’ apart­ments and a sports hall according to a design by Roldán & Berengué.

The two residential buildings featured in this issue show that radical interventions in the building fabric may be needed even if the building is used for the same purpose. In Terrassa, Spain, H Arquitectes reactivated a terraced home that was vacant for over 100 years. Adjaye Associates undertook a similar feat with Mole House in London, which now serves as the home and studio of artist Sue Webster. Rotterdam-based architect and expert in adaptive reuse, Wessel de Jonge states in an interview with Anneke Bokern in this issue, “It’s as important to me that a building can be well utilized as whether the heritage lobby thinks it’s perfect.”

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