Day Care Centre Aschaffenburg

© Eibe Sönnecken
© Eibe Sönnecken
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DAY CARE CENTRE ASCHAFFENBURG
New construction of a six-group, integrative day care centre on Anwandeweg in Aschaffenburg

Location Nilkheim, Aschaffenburg
Client Stadt Aschaffenburg, Amt für Hochbau und Gebäudewirtschaft
Construction Wood frame construction
Floor Area 1.822 m²
Completion 2023
Procurement Non-open realisation competition with subsequent award procedure, 1st Prize
Leistungsphasen 19

A two-storey, L-shaped, compact building completes the development of the new district center. It sets a striking urban accent at the transition to the park. To the east, a large, sheltered outdoor area opens up on the site, to which all group rooms and the multi-purpose room are oriented.

 

The main entrance is centrally located on the planned neighborhood square, while the staff entrance is oriented towards the parking spaces. The kitchen has a separate entrance, which is also used for deliveries.

 

The foyer and waiting area forms the center of the new building. It receives light from two sides and connects the main entrance with the back yard. The nursery management with a consultation room for parent meetings and the baby carriage room as well as the dining and multi-purpose room are located here. The under 3y group rooms are also accessed from here. On the upper floor, you reach the rooms for groups of 3+y children, all group rooms have direct access to the outdoors. The family support point, which also has its own access to the outside, completes the family offer.

 

In bad weather, the play corridors in front of the group rooms can be used as additional exercise areas. In the crèche area, »slipper terraces« are located in front of the group rooms as an extension of the indoor space.

 

The two integrative group rooms and the therapy rooms are combined into one usage cluster. The cernterpiece is an elevator, which guarantees easy accessibility and short distances. The basic idea is inclusion in the sense of equal participation.

 

The multifunctional room, the dining room and the foyer can be directly connected to each other via sliding doors if required, e.g. for daycare celebrations. The adjoining terrace extends the room when the weather is nice. The gallery in the multi-purpose room also incorporates the upper floor.

 

The daycare centre is being built as a timber construction on a concrete floor slab. Cross-laminated timber will be used as the construction material for the ceilings and post and beam construction for the walls. The façade is a horizontal, rear-ventilated larch cladding. The windows are made of timber pro-files with triple glazing. Vertical awnings on the sides provide the necessary sun protection.

 

The interior walls are clad with plasterboard. They can be individually designed, covered with stickers or used as a pinboard. Facing panels are fitted where installations are located. Their surfaces are painted in warm colors according to the color concept. The ceilings are to remain white. They are suspended due to the installations and are acoustically effective. All floors will have underfloor heating and a linoleum covering, also according to the color concept.

 

The daycare center is designed as a passive house. The primary energy required is largely generated by photovoltaic elements on the roof. An electricity buffer storage system installed in the plant room ensures maximum utilization. The sustainability of the building is ensured by the renewable raw material wood. The high degree of prefabrication and the small spans make the timber construction economical.

 

The outdoor facilities are designed to be close to nature, with hilly areas, robust lawns and play islands. The edges, especially towards the compensation area, are designed as a »jungle«. All group rooms have a covered outdoor area that can also be used in bad weather. The balconies provide short and direct access from all group rooms to the outdoor area.

 

All rooms and outdoor areas are barrier-free.

Wangen Tower

©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
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©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Christoph Morlok)
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WANGEN TOWER
Landesgartenschau in Wangen im Allgäu 2024, Germany

Location Wangen im Allgäu, Germany
Client Stadt Wangen im Allgäu
Completion 2024

Set amidst the scenic landscape of the western Allgäu, the Wangen Tower is an architectural landmark and pioneering timber structure for the Landesgartenschau 2024. Based on research conducted at the Cluster of Excellence ‘Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture (IntCDC)’ at the University of Stuttgart, the tower is the very first multi-level, walkable building to use self-shaped, structural timber components. The distinctive expression of the tower’s unique timber structure stand as a testament to the latent design possibilities in naturally renewable, locally sourced, regionally manufactured and resource-effective timber architecture, which can be uncovered through an integrative approach to scientific research, materially-informed computational design, digital fabrication and expert craftsmanship.

 

For a detailed description and more images please view:

https://www.icd.uni-stuttgart.de/projects/wangen-tower/

 

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PROJECT PARTNERS

 

Cluster of Excellence IntCDC – Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture, University of Stuttgart

 

Institute for Computational Design and Construction (ICD)
Prof. Achim Menges, Martin Alvarez, Monika Göbel, Laura Kiesewetter, David Stieler, Dr. Dylan Wood, with support of: Gonzalo Muñoz Guerrero, Alina Turean, Aaron Wagner

 

Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE)
Prof. Dr. Jan Knippers, Gregor Neubauer

 

Blumer-Lehmann AG
Katharina Lehmann, David Riggenbach, Jan Gantenbein

 

with Biedenkapp Stahlbau GmbH
Markus Reischmann, Frank Jahr

 

Stadt Wangen im Allgäu

 

Landesgartenschau Wangen im Allgäu 2024 GmbH

 

PROJECT COLLABORATIONS

 

Scientific Collaboration:
Chair of Forest Utilization, Prof. Dr. Markus Rüggeberg, TU Dresden

 

Further Consulting Engineers:
wbm Beratende Ingenieure
Dipl.-Ing. Dietmar Weber, Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Daniel Boneberg

Collins+Knieps Vermessungsingenieure
Frank Collins

Schöne Neue Welt Ingenieure GbR
Florian Scheible, Andreas Otto

lohrer.hochrein Landschaftsarchitekten DBLA

 

Building Approval:

Checking Engineer: Prof. Hans Joachim Blaß, Karlsruhe

Approval: MPA Stuttgart, Dr. Gerhard Dill Langer, Prof. Dr. Philipp Grönquist

 

Construction Collaboration for Foundation
Fischbach Bauunternehmen

 

PROJECT SUPPORT:

 

DFG Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

 

Zukunft Bau – Bundesministerium für Wohnen, Stadtentwicklung und Bauwesen/BBSR

Texoversum

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© Allmann Wappner Architekten, Menges Scheffler Architekten, Jan Knippers Ingenieure
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© Allmann Wappner Architekten, Menges Scheffler Architekten, Jan Knippers Ingenieure
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TEXOVERSUM
New Education and Innovation Centre

Location Reutlingen
Client Südwesttextil e. V.
Floor Area 4.200 m²
Completion 2023
Procurement Competition, 1st Prize
Project Team Allmann Wappner Architekten, Menges Scheffler Architekten and Jan Knippers Ingenieure
Phases 19

Texoversum, an education, research and innovation centre for the cross-cutting technology in the field of textiles, is being established on the campus of Reutlingen University of Applied Sciences. As part of an ensemble, the new building will be developed and implemented as part of the master plan for the expansion of the Reutlingen campus. The Texoversum is a powerful and at the same time communicative element in the urban context of the academic institution. Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekten, Menges Scheffler Architekten and Jan Knippers Ingenieure are responsible for the design as a team. They were awarded first prize in the related design competition and subsequently commissioned with the realisation. The Texoversum comprises almost 3,000 square metres of space for different user groups. It includes workshops, laboratories, the internationally renowned collection of historical textile and fabric samples, multifunctional areas for research and development and various classrooms.

 

The architectural concept is based on a multifaceted examination of the topic of textile architecture. The design theme is reflected both structurally in the internal interweaving of functions and in the building envelope that creates its own identity. The unique façade made of carbon and glass fibres, the first of its kind to be implemented in this way, represents the innovative power and future viability of fibre-based materials and textile techniques. In a robotic winding process developed at the institutes of Achim Menges (ICD) and Jan Knippers (ITKE) at the University of Stuttgart, each individual facade element can be individually tuned to its functional requirements. Starting from three basic modules, the elements transform themselves according to their orientation toward the sun and form a unique, multi-layered appearance. The elements are completely self-supporting and do not require a supporting structure. Their staggered arrangement allows free views. In addition to the functional requirements as external shading devices and guard railing, the façade meets aesthetic and representative demands and creates a distinctive building that expresses textiles as a driving force for technology.

 

The design theme of permeability and networking is continued in the conception of the building structure. In its inner structure, Texoversum is designed as an open, transparent building with split levels. The offset mezzanine levels, which are also visually interwoven via the atrium, connect the different areas of use with each other and form a spatial continuum that ends in a generous roof terrace. Visually, each level boasts an unmistakable industrial character with hard-wearing screed and polished concrete surfaces as well as a ceiling with exposed conduits. The tiered seating platforms, offering a contrast as soft-furnished spaces, are designed to connect the levels one with another. Separate areas can be partitioned off where needed using fabric dividers. This open-plan design creates a collaborative workspace for the respective user groups, fostering open communication and offering various forums for an animated exchange of ideas.

Hybrid Flax Pavilion

©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
©ICD/ITKE/IntCDC University of Stuttgart
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HYBRID FLAX PAVILION
Landesgartenschau Wangen im Allgäu, 2024, Germany

Location Wangen im Allgäu, Germany
Client Landesgartenschau Wangen im Allgäu 2024 GmbH
Completion 2024

The Hybrid Flax Pavilion constitutes a central exhibition building on the grounds of the Landesgartenschau, located on the winding banks of the recently revitalised Argen River. The pavilion showcases a novel wood-natural-fibre hybrid construction system developed by the Cluster of Excellence »Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture« (IntCDC) at the University of Stuttgart, as an alternative to conventional building methods. The unique hybrid system combines thin cross-laminated timber with robotically wound flax fibre bodies to create a novel, resource-efficient building structure made from regional, bio-based materials with a distinct local connection. Flax was historically processed in the local textile industry, whose old spinning mill was renovated as part of the Landesgartenschau. The pavilion’s gently undulating roof, together with its circular floor plan and centrally located climate garden, creates an exhibition space that seamlessly integrates into the surrounding landscape. The geothermally activatable floor slab made of recycled concrete provides year-round comfortable use of the permanent building.

 

For a detailed description and more images please view:

https://www.icd.uni-stuttgart.de/projects/hybrid-flax-pavilion/

 

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PROJECT PARTNERS

Cluster of Excellence IntCDC – Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture, University of Stuttgart

 

ICD Institute for Computational Design and Construction

Prof. Achim Menges, Rebeca Duque Estrada, Monika Göbel, Harrison Hildebrandt, Fabian Kannenberg, Christoph Schlopschnat, Christoph Zechmeister

 

ITKE Institute for Building Structures and Structural Design
Prof. Dr. Jan Knippers, Tzu-Ying Chen, Gregor Neubauer, Marta Gil Pérez, Valentin Wagner

 

with support of: Daniel Bozo, Minghui Chen, Peter Ehvert, Alan Eskildsen, Alice Fleury, Sebastian Hügle, Niki Kentroti, Timo König, Laura Marsillo, Pascal Mindermann, Ivana Trifunovic, Weiqi Xie

 

Landesgartenschau Wangen im Allgäu 2024
Karl-Eugen Ebertshäuser, Hubert Meßmer

 

Stadt Wangen im Allgäu

 

HA-CO Carbon GmbH
Siegbert Pachner, Dr. Oliver Fischer, Danny Hummel

 

STERK abbundzentrum GmbH
Klaus Sterk, Franz Zodel, Simon Sterk

 

FoWaTec GmbH
Sebastian Forster

 

Biedenkapp Stahlbau GmbH
Stefan Weidle, Markus Reischmann, Frank Jahr

 

Harald Klein Erdbewegungen GmbH

 

PROJECT COLLABORATIONS

 

Scientific Collaboration:
IntCDC Large Scale Construction Laboratory
Sebastian Esser, Sven Hänzka, Hendrik Köhler, Sergej Klassen

 

Further Consulting Engineers:

 

Belzner Holmes und Partner Light-Design
Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Thomas Hollubarsch, Victoria Coval

 

BiB Concept
Dipl.-Ing. Mathias Langhoff

 

Collins+Knieps Vermessungsingenieure
Frank Collins, Edgar Knieps

 

Moräne GmbH – Geotechnik Bohrtechnik
Luis Ulrich M.Sc.

 

Spektrum Bauphysik & Bauökologie
Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Markus Götzelmann

 

wbm Beratende Ingenieure
Dipl.-Ing. Dietmar Weber, Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Daniel Boneberg

 

lohrer.hochrein Landschaftsarchitekten DBLA

 

Building Approval:

 

Landesstelle für Bautechnik
Dr. Stefan Brendler, Dipl.-Ing. Steffen Schneider

 

Proof Engineer
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Hans Joachim Blaß, Dr.-Ing. Marcus Flaig

 

Versuchsanstalt für Stahl, Holz und Steine, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Thomas Ummenhofer, Dipl.-Ing. Jörg Schmied

 

MPA Materials Testing Institute, University of Stuttgart
Melissa Lücking M.Sc., Dipl.-Ing (FH) Frank Waibel

 

Construction Collaboration
ARGE- Leistungsbereich Wärmeversorgungs- und Mittelspannanlagen
Franz Miller OHG
Stauber + Steib GmbH

 

PROJECT SUPPORT:

 

DFG German Research Foundation

 

Ministerium für Ernährung, Ländlichen Raum und Verbraucherschutz Baden-Württemberg

 

Bioökonomie Baden-Württemberg: Forschung- und Entwicklung (FuE) Förderprogramm »Nachhaltige Bioökonomie als Innovationsmotor für den Ländlichen Raum«

 

Holz Innovativ Programm (HIP), Ministerium für Ernährung, Ländlichen Raum und Verbraucherschutz Baden-Württemberg

 

IFB Institute of Aircraft Design, University of Stuttgart

 

ISW Institute for Control Engineering of Machine Tools and Manufacturing Units, University of Stuttgart

Kunstforum Ingelheim

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KUNSTFORUM INGELHEIM
Conversion, refurbishment and extension of a listed building ensemble

Location Ingelheim
Client Stadt Ingelheim
Floor Area 1761 m²
Completion 2018
Procurement Application procedure
Project Team processing by Scheffler + Partner Arch. in collaboration with Gottstein + Blumenstein Arch.
Phases 19

The Kunstforum Ingelheim was built in 1861 as the town hall of Nieder-Ingelheim. It has been used for exhibitions since the 1950s. It has become nationally known through the International Days of Ingelheim – art exhibitions that are firmly anchored in the cultural landscape of Rhineland-Palatinate and are organised every year with the support of Boehringer Ingelheim.

Together with the market square and fountain, the former infant school and a late Baroque residential building, the Old Town Hall forms a listed ensemble on Francois-Lachenal-Platz, close to the Imperial Palace.

 

As part of the necessary refurbishment, a new foyer and an additional exhibition space under the courtyard were added to the ensemble. The new underground exhibition space complements and enlarges the Kunstforum to a total of five exhibition rooms.

 

The new entrance to the Kunstforum is via the inner courtyard into the new foyer with ticket sales and museum shop. The listed pavilion adjoining the foyer was converted into a café with a catering kitchen and seating in the inner courtyard.

 

In order to provide barrier-free access to all levels, the existing staircase was redesigned and a lift was installed.

The exhibition rooms were given a neutral interior design, particularly suitable for temporary exhibitions. A flexible arrangement of darkening elements enables both daylight exhibitions and the complete panelling of the window openings as a hanging surface.

 

A particular challenge was to create a ventilation and air conditioning system that meets the high requirements of international lenders, despite the limited space available.

Stadttheater Aschaffenburg

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Zuschauerraum des renovierten Stadttheaters in Aschaffenburg, kurz vor der Wiedereröffnung am 28.10.2011.
Zuschauerraum des renovierten Stadttheaters in Aschaffenburg, kurz vor der Wiedereröffnung am 28.10.2011.
Zuschauerraum des renovierten Stadttheaters in Aschaffenburg, kurz vor der Wiedereröffnung am 28.10.2011.
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STADTTHEATER ASCHAFFENBURG
Conversion, restoration and extension of a listed theatre building.

Location Aschaffenburg
Client Stadt Aschaffenburg
Completion 2011
Procurement Competition
Project Team processing by Scheffler + Partner Arch. in collaboration with Lautenschläger Arch.
Phases 29

The Aschaffenburg Municipal Theatre was founded in a three-gabled Renaissance building during the reign of Grand Duke Carl Theodor von Dalberg. The building never had its own representative theatre façade. The architect has also remained unknown to this day. All that is known is that the building was opened in 1811. The theatre experienced an eventful history with many conversions and changes of use. In 1944, it was badly damaged in an air raid. However, it was put back into operation as a temporary theatre in 1947.

 

The area around the theatre had changed considerably as a result of the destruction caused by the war. In place of the dense old town development, an open area had emerged that was used as a car park for many years. In addition, the new town hall building introduced a new urban scale to the old town centre. The construction of an underground car park finally freed up the car park for new uses.

 

In 2000, the city council decided to carry out a complete refurbishment of the theatre instead of the individual measures that had become necessary time and again. At the same time, the theatre square was to be redesigned. The decision was made in favour of an expert opinion process with the participation of the citizens.

 

In 2001, we were commissioned with the planning together with the Wolfgang Lautenschläger office. The first construction phase was a two-storey city loggia that closed off the theatre square towards the town hall. It also included access to the underground car park and a small ice cream parlour. The theatre square was built in the next construction phase. It was surfaced with light grey granite and a large horizontal sundial. A small watercourse divides the square into a sunny and a shady area. The square offers a pleasant and consumption-free outdoor space. In our eyes, it is the ‘living room’ of the Dalberg quarter.

 

The third construction phase concerns the theatre itself. In addition to the basic refurbishment, a second foyer was added to the upper floor and rooms were added for the new theatre restaurant.

 

The façade facing the square, which had been missing since the destruction of the war, was completed and topped off with a wide projecting canopy that corresponds with the roof of the city loggia.

 

With its façade dating from different periods (Renaissance, Classicism, reconstruction, present day), the municipal theatre makes the eventful history of the theatre itself visible. The theatre was reopened in 2011 to celebrate its 200th anniversary.

BUGA Wood Pavilion

© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart (Photo: Roland Halbe)
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
©BUGA Heilbronn 2019 GmbH
© Nikolai Benner
© Nikolai Benner
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE University of Stuttgart
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BUGA WOOD PAVILION
Bundesgartenschau Heilbronn 2019

Location Heilbronn
Client Bundesgartenschau Heilbronn 2019 GmbH
Completion 2019

The BUGA Wood Pavilion celebrates a new approach to digital timber construction. Its segmented wood shell is based on biological principles found in the plate skeleton of sea urchins, which have been studied by the Institute for Computational Design and Construction (ICD) and the Institute for Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE) at the University of Stuttgart for almost a decade.

 

As part of the project, a robotic manufacturing platform was developed for the automated assembly and milling of the pavilion’s 376 bespoke hollow wood segments. This fabrication process ensures that all segments fit together with sub-millimetre precision like a big, three-dimensional puzzle. The stunning wooden roof spans 30 meters over one of BUGA’s main event and concert venues, using a minimum amount of material while also generating a unique architectural space.

 

For a detailed description and more images please view:

https://www.icd.uni-stuttgart.de/projects/buga-wood-pavilion-2019/

 

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PROJECT PARTNERS

 

ICD Institute for Computational Design, University of Stuttgart
Prof. Achim Menges, Martin Alvarez, Monika Göbel, Abel Groenewolt, Oliver David Krieg, Ondrej Kyjanek, Hans Jakob Wagner

 

ITKE Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design, University of Stuttgart
Prof. Jan Knippers, Lotte Aldinger, Simon Bechert, Daniel Sonntag

 

with support of: Jorge Christie, Rebeca Duque Estrada, Robert Faulkner, Fabian Kannenberg, Guillaume Caussarieu, Bahar Al Bahar, Kyriaki Goti, Mathias Maierhofer, Valentina Soana, Babasola Thomas

 

Müllerblaustein Bauwerke GmbH, Blaustein
Reinhold Müller, Daniel Müller, Bernd Schmid

 

BEC GmbH
Matthias Buck, Zied Bhiri

 

Bundesgartenschau Heilbronn 2019
Hanspeter Faas, Oliver Toellner

 

PROJECT BUILDING PERMIT PROCESS

 

Landesstelle für Bautechnik
Dr. Stefan Brendler und Dipl.-Ing. Willy Weidner

 

Proof Engineer
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Hugo Rieger

 

MPA Stuttgart
Dr. Simon Aicher

 

PLANNING PARTNERS

 

Belzner Holmes Light-Design, Stuttgart
Dipl.-Ing. Thomas Hollubarsch

 

BIB Kutz GmbH & Co.KG, Karlsruhe
Dipl.- Ing. Beatrice Gottlöber

 

IIGS – Institut for Engineering Geodesy, University of Stuttgart
Prof. Volker Schwieger, Laura Balange, Urs Basalla

 

PROJECT SUPPORT

 

State of Baden-Wuerttemberg
University of Stuttgart
EFRE European Union
GETTYLAB
DFG German Research Foundation

 

Carlisle Construction Materials GmbH
Puren GmbH
Hera Gmbh & Co. KG
Beck Fastener Group
J. Schmalz GmbH
Niemes Dosiertechnik GmbH
Jowat Adhesives SE
Raithle Präzisionswerkzeuge Service
Leuze electronic GmbH & Co. KG
Metsä Wood Deutschland GmbH

Baden-Wuerttemberg Haus, World Expo 2020, Dubai

© Januschthe visual collective | http://www.janusch.co
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BADEN-WUERTTEMBERG HAUS
World EXPO 2020, Dubai

Location Dubai
Client Baden-Württemberg Expo 2020 GmbH
Floor Area 2500 m²
Completion Competition 2019
Procurement Two-Stage Competition, 2. Price
Project Team LRO Lederer Ragnarsdóttir Oei GmbH & CO. KG, Jan Knippers Ingenieure, DS-plan Ingenieurgesellschaft GmbH, supported by Menges Scheffler Architekten PartG mbB with ICD University of Stuttgart

The Baden-Wuerttemberg Haus reflects the federal State of Baden-Wuerttemberg’s technological, ecological and cultural competence at the World EXPO 2020 in Dubai. The pavilion creates a unique exhibition space and architecturally embodies the state’s leading position in engineering and advanced manufacturing, the sustainable use of natural resources, and cutting research in design and construction.

 

The essential message of the pavilion initially emanates from its shell, the biomimetic form. Its shape is based on the observation and research of construction methods in nature. The supporting structures of plants or animals consist of a multitude of elements that look the same at first glance, but on closer observation each has its own individual shape according to its physical requirements. With the unique integrative computational design methods developed at the University of Stuttgart, it is possible to transfer the construction principles that prevail in nature to architecture. Each of the individual wooden elements therefore has a differentiated form and structure. The element is also a symbol of the individual people who are creating the project together in line with the motto ‘connecting minds’. It also symbolises the combination of renewable construction materials and state-of-the-art industrial production. In this respect, it also symbolises the high-tech location of Baden-Württemberg.

Elytra Filament PavilionVictoria and Albert Museum

© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© Roland Halbe
© NAARO
© NAARO
© NAARO
© NAARO
© NAARO
© NAARO
Exhibition on Ove Arup and installation by Achim Menges with Jan Knippers, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Exhibition on Ove Arup and installation by Achim Menges with Jan Knippers, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London
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ELYTRA FILAMENT PAVILION
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Location Victoria & Albert Museum, London
Client Victoria & Albert Museum
Completion 2016

The Elytra Filament Pavilion celebrates a truly integrative approach to design and engineering. As a centrepiece of the V&A’s Engineering Season it demonstrates how architectural design can unfold from a synergy of structural engineering, environmental engineering and production engineering, resulting in unique spatial and aesthetic qualities. It showcases the profound impact of emerging technologies on our conceptualisation of design, engineering and making, by intensifying the visitors architectural experience of the museum’s central garden. But instead of being merely a static display, the pavilion constitutes a dynamic space and an evolving structure. The cellular canopy grows from an onsite fabrication nucleus, and it does so in response to patterns of inhabitation of the garden over time, driven by real time sensing data. The pavilion’s capacity to be locally produced, to expand and to contract over time provides a vision of future inner city green areas with responsive semi-outdoor spaces that enable a broader spectrum of public activities, and thus extend the use of the scarce resource of public urban ground.

 

For a detailed description and more images please view:

https://www.icd.uni-stuttgart.de/projects/elytra-filament-pavilion/

 

__________________________________________

 

DESIGN, ENGINEERING AND FABRICATION TEAM

 

Achim Menges with Moritz Dörstelmann
ICDInstitute for Computational Design, University of Stuttgart
Achim Menges Architect, Frankfurt
Team also includes: Marshall Prado (fabrication development), Aikaterini Papadimitriou, Niccolo Dambrosio, Roberto Naboni, with support by Dylan Wood, Daniel Reist

 

Jan Knippers
ITKEInstitute of Building Structures and Structural Design, University of Stuttgart
Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering, Stuttgart, New York
Team also includes: Valentin Koslowski & James Solly (structure development), Thiemo Fildhuth (structural sensors)

 

Thomas Auer
Transsolar Climate Engineering, Stuttgart
Building Technology and Climate Responsive Design, TU München
Team also includes: Elmira Reisi, Boris Plotnikov

 

With the support of:
Michael Preisack, Christian Arias, Pedro Giachini, Andre Kauffman, Thu Nguyen, Nikolaos Xenos, Giulio Brugnaro, Alberto Lago, Yuliya Baranovskaya, Belen Torres, IFB University of Stuttgart (Prof. P. Middendorf)

 

Commission:
Victoria & Albert Museum, London 2016

FUNDING

 

Victoria & Albert Museum, London
University of Stuttgart

Getty Lab

Kuka Roboter GmbH + Kuka Robotics UK Ltd
SGL Carbon SE
Hexion
Covestro AG
FBGS International NV
Arnold AG
PFEIFER Seil- und Hebetechnik GmbH
Stahlbau Wendeler GmbH + Co. KG
Lange+Ritter GmbH
STILL GmbH

Suzhou Apartment-Hotel Pavilions

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arch_MSA_Suzhou_01
© Achim Menges
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© Achim Menges
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© Achim Menges
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© Achim Menges
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© Achim Menges

SUZHOU APARTEMENT-HOTEL PAVILIONS

Location Suzhou, China
Client Suzhou Taihu Yuanbo Industrial Development Co., Ltd
Floor Area 600 m²
Completion 2016
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 13

The six innovative timber pavilions were constructed for the 9th Horticultural Expo in Suzhou, Jiangsu Province. The design anticipated the post-Expo use as apartment pavilions that form part of a hotel.

Vertical Extension of Inner-City Car Park

© Menges Scheffler Architekten
© Menges Scheffler Architekten
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2021_Aufstockung03
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VERTICAL EXTENSION OF INNER-CITY CAR PARK

Location South Germany
Client Private
Floor Area 1.100 m²
Completion 2018
Procurement Direct commission
Project Team Menges Scheffler Architekten, Knippers Helbig Ingenieure
Phases 13

The project comprises the new construction of a lightweight timber shell on an existing inner-city car park with minimal intervention in the existing structure. This enables a new use of the top car park level as a commercial building. The urban context and the challenging statics predestine this construction task for an innovative lightweight timber construction. State-of-the-art computer-based design and manufacturing processes make the high-performance cross-laminated timber shell possible. The technology for this construction was developed in collaboration with the institutes ICD and ITKE at the University of Stuttgart. The segmented timber shell spans across the split-level car park, creating three staggered, independent levels. The structure of the hexagonal timber honeycombs can be clearly seen inside, as the underside of the load-bearing timber construction is left untreated.

Landesgartenschau Exhibition Hall

© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
RH2276-0017
RH2276-0017
[©(c)Roland Halbe; Veroeffentlichung nur gegen Honorar, Urhebervermerk und Beleg/Copyrightpermission required for reproduction, Photocredit: Roland Halbe]
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© Gerber & Nebelsick/Nebelsick & Grun, University of Tubingen.
© Gerber & Nebelsick/Nebelsick & Grun, University of Tubingen.
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
© ICD/ITKE/IIGS University of Stuttgart
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LANDESGARTENSCHAU EXHIBITION HALL
Landesgartenschau Schwäbisch Gmünd, 2014

Location Schwäbisch Gmünd
Client Landesgartenschau Schwäbisch Gmünd GmbH
Completion 2014

The Landesgartenschau Exhibition Hall is an architectural demonstrator building and a showcase for the current developments in computational design and robotic fabrication for lightweight timber construction. Funded by the European Union and the state of Baden-Württemberg, the building is the first to have its primary structure entirely made of robotically prefabricated beech plywood plates. The newly developed timber construction offers not only innovative architectural possibilities; it is also highly resource efficient, with the load bearing plate structure being just 50mm thin. This is made possible through integrative computational design, simulation, fabrication and surveying methods.

 

The Landesgartenschau Exhibition Hall was conceived at the University of Stuttgart as part of the »Robotics in Timber Construction« research project and realized in collaboration with Müllerblaustein Holzbau GmbH, Landesgartenschau Schwäbisch Gmünd 2014 GmbH, the forest administration of Baden-Württemberg (ForstBW) and KUKA Robotics GmbH. The project demonstrates the new opportunities that arise from the integration of computational design, simulation and fabrication methods for performative and resource efficient constructions made from the locally available and renewable resource wood. The building introduces an innovative, robotically fabricated lightweight timber plate construction system made of beech plywood. It was developed at the Institute for Computational Design (ICD, Prof. Achim Menges), the Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design (ITKE, Prof. Jan Knippers), and the Institute of Engineering Geodesy (IIGS, Prof. Volker Schwieger) and realized in collaboration with Müllerblaustein Holzbau GmbH. The building is part of the biannual Landesgartenschau, where it hosts an exhibition by ForstBW. The project was partly funded by the European Fund for Regional Development (ERDF) and »Forst und Holz« Baden-Württemberg as well as by the project partners.

 

Wood is one of the oldest building materials known to mankind. But the advent of novel robotic fabrication processes in conjunction with computational design, simulation, and surveying methods, offers entirely new design possibilities and fields of application. These form the basis for particularly performative and efficient constructions made from the locally available and renewable resource wood.

 

For a detailed description and more images please view:

https://www.icd.uni-stuttgart.de/projects/landesgartenschau-exhibition-hall/

______________

 

PROJECT TEAM

 

ICD Institute for Computational Design
Prof. A. Menges (PI), Tobias Schwinn, Oliver David Krieg

 

ITKE Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design
Prof. J. Knippers, Jian-Min Li

 

IIGS Institute of Engineering Geodesy
Prof. Volker Schwieger, Annette Schmitt

 

Müllerblaustein Holzbau GmbH>
Reinhold Müller, Benjamin Eisele

 

KUKA Roboter GmbH
Alois Buchstab, Frank Zimmermann

 

Landesbetrieb Forst Baden-Württemberg
Sebastian Schreiber, Frauke Brieger

 

Landesgartenschau Schwäbisch Gmünd 2014 GmbH
Karl-Eugen Ebertshäuser, Sabine Rieger

 

PROJECT FUNDING

 

EFRE European Union
Clusterinitiative Forst und Holz Baden Württemberg
Landesgartenschau Schwäbisch Gmünd 2014 GmbH
müllerblaustein Bauwerke GmbH
KUKA Roboter GmbH
Landesbetrieb Forst Baden-Württemberg

PROJECT SUPPORT

 

Adler Deutschland GmbH
Autodesk GmbH
Carlisle Construction Materials GmbH
Fagus Stiftung
Gutex H. Henselmann GmbH & Co. KG
Hess & Co. AG
MPAMaterials Testing Institute, University of Stuttgart
Leitz GmbH & Co. KG
Spax International GmbH & Co. KG

National Library of the Czech Republic

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2006_Prag-Library02
OCEAN NORTH, Scheffler + Partner
2006_Prag-Library04
2006_Prag-Library04
OCEAN NORTH, Scheffler + Partner
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2006_Prag-Library06
OCEAN NORTH, Scheffler + Partner
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OCEAN NORTH, Scheffler + Partner
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webam_arch_07_on_sp_czechlibrary_am_tn02.jpg
OCEAN NORTH, Scheffler + Partner

NATIONAL LIBRARY OF THE CZECH REPUBLIC

Location Prag, Tschechische Republik
Client Národní knihovnaNational Library of the Czech Republic
Area 52.000 m²
Completion 2006
Procurement International Architectural Design Competition

The competition proposal for the New Czech National Library in Prague, a collaborative project of OCEAN NORTH and Scheffler + Partner, seeks to provide both a singular monolithic appearance for one of the key buildings of Czech culture, as well as a continuous and gradient spatial experience of the building and adjacent landscape of the site. The overall building volume is structured to be at the same time contained and open, confined and continuous, providing differentiated spatial experiences for visitors and employees alike. The scheme is understood as one of several landscaped sites that together form a network of adjacent events, differentiated spatial provisions and scenic spots.

 

The distinctive tectonic articulation of the cantilevering volumes is developed through generative computational processes driven by spatial and structural criteria. In an analytic procedure the stress distribution within the envelope of a specified volume is evaluated and mapped as a vector field of principal forces. According to this structural information, combined with other parameters such as for instance the angle of incident of sunlight, view axes and spatial characteristics, a network of merging branches is derived. The resulting changing opacity and permeability of the building envelope that ranges from the opaque and solid national archive to the gradient density of the cantilevered envelopes‘ structural skin and the open access to public landscape provides a wide range of spatial and microclimatic situation that facilitate and enable both, the high level of organisational control required for a library building and the heterogeneous conditions enabling zones of migrating activities and intensified individual experience of inhabiting space and enjoying the various media and the social dynamic of the library.

 

______________

 

PROJECT TEAM

 

OCEAN NORTH and Scheffler + Partner

Project Coordination: Michael Hensel and Achim Menges
Project Team: Andrea Di Stefano, Aleksandra Jaeschke, Steinar Killi, Eva Scheffler, Birger Sevaldson, Defne Sunguroğlu, Guillem Barraut, Mattia Gambardella, Pavel Hladik, Gabriel Sanchiz

 

Engineering Consultants: Bollinger & Grohmann Consulting Engeneers
Landscape Consultant: Thom Roelly

Visitor Centre Hercules Monument

VISITOR CENTRE HERCULES MONUMENT

Location Kassel Wilhelmshöhe, Germany
Client Land Hessen, Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst
Completion 2005
Procurement Competition
Procurement Competition

The competition design for a visitor centre for the Hercules monument in Bergpark Wilhelmshöhe, Germany, which is on the list of prospective world heritage sites, is situated at the 515m high peak of a major baroque sight axis of between Kassel Wilhelmshöhe Palace, a 250m long water cascade and the 71m tall Hercules monument designed by Francesco Guerniero in 1717. Due to the complex historical situation the proposal for the visitor centre suggests an infolding of the park to articulate an interior landscape submerged underground that intensifies the transition from the natural surrounding of Habichtswald to the baroque park and monument. Thus, rather than relating the competition brief to specific spatial entities that aim at directly answering the programmatic and volumetric requirements the project‘s spatial strategy is based on providing an interior environment made up of different micro-milieus. These offer a range of luminous conditions, surface articulations and views along each visitor‘s path to the Hercules monument through strategic penetrations of the exterior park by which the structure is covered. Thus the western approach to Wilhelmshöhe passing through the visitor centre is articulated as a series of terrains that allow each visitor to choose individual itineraries and sojourns as a personal response to daily and seasonal changes of light intensities, different vistas, programmatic provisions and duration of visit.

Schönhof Viertel Bockenheim

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2019_WBW_Bockenheim_Galeriebild
© NH Studio
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2019_WBW_Bockenheim_05
© NH Studio
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SCHÖNHOF VIERTEL BOCKENHEIM

New construction of a mixed-use building complex

Location Bockenheim, Frankfurt am Main
Client Instone Real Estate Development GmbH
Floor Area 34.750 m²
Units 190
Completion 2021
Procurement competition 1st Prize panel B, 2nd Prize panel G
Phases 15
Project Team Sander.Hofrichter Planungsgesellschaft mbH, Berlin

The new centre of the Schönhof district will be created by two mixed-use building complexes with a central square in between. Housing, education, commerce and a sports hall are organised in two ‘city blocks’ and form the new centre of the district.

 

The block as a historically established polyfunctional urban figure forms the basic framework for a hybrid building utilisation.

 

The staggered height development responds to the planned surrounding development, while the residential building with its different building depths additionally profiles and structures the urban buildings. The heterogeneous uses, residential, school, day care centre and retail can be seen in the building expression.

 

Building site B contains the local amenities of the new urban quarter on the ground floor: two supermarkets, several retail outlets and a restaurant facing the neighbourhood square. On the first floor, there are medical practices or offices as well as an indoor childcare centre. The remaining areas and all other upper floors are reserved exclusively for residential use. This urban mix of uses helps to reduce traffic in the neighbourhood to bicycles and pedestrians.

Bürgerhaus Herborn

P2014_Herborn_Buergerhaus01
P2014_Herborn_Buergerhaus01
© NH Studio
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Location Herborn
Client Magistrat der Stadt Herborn
Typology Cultural building/Public building
Period of time 2014
Procurement Competition
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

Bürgerhaus Herborn


New community center in Herborn-Burg


Competition, Honorary Mention

Humboldt Laboratory

Location Berlin, Germany
Client Humboldt University, Berlin
Typology Cultural building/Public building
Period of time 2016
Procurement Competition
Project partner Menges Scheffler Architects

Humboldt Labor


Interior Design of Humboldt Laboratory

Humboldt Laboratory, Berlin

The Humboldt Laboratory creates a novel space for exhibiting and reflecting research and science. It constitutes the architectural context for the public exposure, sensual experience and critical discourse of new knowledge. In doing so, it embodies the key characteristics of an »open university« and its ambition to enable multifaceted interfaces between science and society, between knowledge and experience, between object and subject.

The design strives to engender a correlation between the production of space and the production of knowledge. This reciprocity is not cast in a predetermined architectural expression. But it is explored through an open-ended and ongoing spatial transformation of the lab, which in itself constitutes an active investigation of the multilayered capacity of design to materialize and generate knowledge.

This explorative character requires an approach that profoundly differs from the common »top down« approaches to exhibition design. Instead, the focus here is on the development of an enabling methodology to study the interrelation between the production of knowledge and space. The typical architectural approach of deriving the design elements and ordering systems from a guiding design idea is inverted. First, an adaptive algorithm and related fabrication process has been developed that generates different element morphologies, which enable the creation of diverse system morphologies, resulting in multifaceted spatial morphologies. This has been studied for two basic element types: polygon elements and elastica elements.

Project Coordination: Achim Menges


Project Team: Samim Mehdizadeh, Eva Menges

Schönhofviertel Baufeld F

© NH STUDIO
© NH STUDIO
© NH STUDIO
Lageplan
Lageplan
Lageplan

SCHÖNHOFVIERTEL BAUFELD F

New residential development incl. day care centre

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Nassauische Heimstätte and Instone Real Estate Development GmbH
Floor Area 29.947 m²
Units 325
Completion 2020
Procurement Multiple commissioning

Börsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandel

BÖRSENVEREIN DES DEUTSCHEN BUCHHANDEL
Conversion and extension of three listed buildings

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Börsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels Frankfurt am Main
Floor Area 15.592 m²
Completion 2011
Procurement Competition
Project Team processing by Scheffler + Partner Arch. in collaboration with Dobberstein Arch.
Phases 29

Competition, 1st prize

 

The new home of the Börsenverein is located in Frankfurt’s city centre between Braubachstraße and Berliner Straße. It consists of three listed old buildings that are now part of the city’s familiar image. These three buildings and a new building house the entire Börsenverein group: the Börsenverein itself, the Gesellschaft für Ausstellungen und Messen and the Marketing- und Vertriebsgesellschaft (MVB) as well as other Börsenverein institutions.

 

They will be carefully adapted to their new use through refurbishment, remodelling, two extensions inside the block and connecting bridges.

Despite their different appearances, the two buildings in Braubachstrasse date back to 1926 and are part of the first major redevelopment of the old city centre, which was carried out at the beginning of the 20th century. In contrast, the house in Berliner Strasse was only completed in 1956. It symbolises the return of white modernism after the Second World War and pays homage to Le Corbusier’s ‘Pavillon Suisse’ in Paris.

Zeichnen auf DIN A4, BraubachFive

Location Galerie BraubachFive, Frankfurt am Main
Typology Exhibition
Period of time 2011

Zeichnen auf DIN A4, BraubachFive


Exhibition of selected hand drawings by Ernst Ulrich Scheffler

Exhibition »Mensch! Skulptur«

P2017_Mensch-Skulptur09
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur09
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (1)
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (1)
© Harald Richter, Hamburg
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P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (2)
© Harald Richter, Hamburg
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P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (3)
© Harald Richter, Hamburg
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P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (4)
© Harald Richter, Hamburg
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (5)
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (5)
© Harald Richter, Hamburg
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (6)
P2017_Mensch-Skulptur01 (6)
© Harald Richter, Hamburg
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© Thomas Ott
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© Thomas Ott
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© Thomas Ott

EXHIBITION ‘MENSCH! SCULPTUR’
as part of the International Days Ingelheim, Kunstforum Ingelheim

Location Ingelheim
Client Boehringer Ingelheim
Exhibition 520 m²
Period 2017 & 2018
Procurement Direct commission
Project Team processing by Scheffler + Partner Arch. in collaboration with Gottstein + Blumenstein Arch.
Phases 15

To mark the completion of our refurbished and extended art forum, the sculpture exhibition ‘Mensch! Sculpture’ was opened as part of the Ingelheim International Days.

The exhibition architecture and the composition of the individual sculptures were created in close collaboration with the curator Dr Ulrich Luckhardt.

 

The exhibition ‘Mensch! Sculpture’ shows works by 12 important sculptors who deal with the theme of the human body. The 61 exhibits made of marble, bronze or terracotta are by the artists Alexander Archipenko, Max Beckmann, Rudolf Belling, Edgar Degas, Alberto Giacometti, Georg Kolbe, Henri Laurens, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Aristide Maillol, Henry Moore, Pablo Picasso and Auguste Rodin.

Liebieghaus, Museum Alter Plastik

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Hochbauamt der Stadt Frankfurt am Main
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 19851990
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 15 + Artistic supervision
Project partners Scheffler & Warschauer Architekten BDA

Liebieghaus, Museum Alter Plastik

Conversion, restoration and extension of a listed building ensemble.

Gartenreich Frankfurt am Main

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Nassauische Heimstätte
Typology Urban planning/Public building
Area 27.500 m²
Period of time 2009
Procurement Peer review process
Project phases Study
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA




Gartenreich Frankfurt am Main


Reorganisation of Palmengarten, Botanical Garden und Grüneburgpark

Stadtteileingang Galluswarte

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Stadt Frankfurt am Main
Typology Urban Planing/Public building
Period of time 2011- ca.2020
Procurement Competition
Project phases 19
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA




Stadtteileingang Galluswarte


Urban Competition for the reorganisation of Galluswarte


Competition, 1st price

Noldehaus Seebüll

Location Seebüll, Nordfriesland
Client Stiftung Seebüll Ada und Emil Nolde
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Exhibition Area approx. 250 m²
Period of time third and fourth quarter of 2018
Procurement Competitive multiple comission

Noldehaus in Seebüll


Competitive multiple comission. Finalist.

Day Care Centre Sternenbrücke

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Caritasverband Frankfurt e.V.
Typology Public building
Period of time 20112012
Procurement Direct commition
Project phases 29
Project partners Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

 

Kindertagesstätte Sternenbrücke

Conversion of office space into a nursery school

Museumsvorplatz

Location Wiesbaden
Client Land Hessen
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 2014
Procurement Competition
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

with Achim Menges Architekt BDA

Museumsvorplatz


Design for a new entrance situation for the Museum of Wiesbaden.

Museum Huelsmann, Kunstgewerbesammlung Bielefeld

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1992_BielefeldMuseumKHW01
© Waltraud Krase
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1992_BielefeldMuseumKHW02
© Waltraud Krase
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1992_BielefeldMuseumKHW03
© Waltraud Krase
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1992_BielefeldMuseumKHW04
© Waltraud Krase
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© Waltraud Krase
Location Bielefeld
Client City Bielefeld
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 19921995
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 17 + artistic supervision
Project partner Scheffler & Warschauer Architekten BDA

Museum Huelsmann, Kunstgewerbesammlung der Stadt Bielefeld


Conversion, restoration and extension of a listed villa

U-Bahn Aufgang Willy-Brandt-Platz

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client VGF
Typology Public building
Period of time 20042010
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 19
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

U-Bahn Aufgang Willy-Brandt-Platz


Underground Station exit in front of the Frankfurt Theatre

Deutsche Schule Budapest

GERMAN SCHOOL IN BUDAPEST
New construction of a German school abroad

Location Budapest
Client Stiftung Deutsche Schule Budapest
Floor Area
Completition 2001
Procurement Competition, 1st Prize

The main building is situated at the upper edge of a steep, 36-hectare forested site and follows the natural contour lines with a gentle curve.

At the heart of the school is a spacious, two-story entrance hall that provides direct access to the classrooms, library, auditorium, and administrative offices. A glazed corridor facing the valley, the »school street«, connects all areas, leads to the classrooms, and offers panoramic views over the city.

Large structures such as the sports hall and auditorium are partially embedded into the slope. Their roofs are used as schoolyards and sports fields. The new building is fully designed to be accessible for people with disabilities.

Frankfurt International School

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P2010_FrankfurtInternationalSchool04
P2010_FrankfurtInternationalSchool05
P2010_FrankfurtInternationalSchool05
© B.C. Horvath
Location Oberursel
Client Frankfurt International School
Typology Public buildings
Period of time 2010
Procurement Competition
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA




Frankfurt International School


Extension of the FIS Oberursel


Competition, 3rd price

Haus Giersch, Museum regionaler Kunst

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Stiftung Giersch
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 19982000
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 19
Project partners Scheffler & Warschauer + Partner Architekten BDA

 


Haus Giersch, Museum regionaler Kunst


Conversion and restoration of a listed villa

Ausstellung Museum für Kommunikation

1999_AustellungFeldpost01
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© Walter Hagenow
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© Walter Hagenow
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© Walter Hagenow
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1999_AustellungFeldpost05
© Walter Hagenow
1999_AustellungFeldpost06
1999_AustellungFeldpost06
© Walter Hagenow
Location Museum für Kommunikation, Frankfurt am Main
Client Museum für Kommunikation, Frankfurt am Main
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 1999
Procurement Direct commission
Project partners Scheffler & Warschauer Architekten BDA

 


Ausstellung Museum für Kommunikation


Exhibition of wartime letters

Weilburg-Orangerie

Location Weilburg
Client Verwaltung der Staatlichen Schlösser und Gärten, Bad Homburg v. d. Höhe
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 20102012
Procurement Direct commision
Project phases 15 +Artistic supervision
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA




Weilburg-Orangerie


Café and concert hall in the orangery of the palace garden of Weilburg

Theaterlabor

Location Gießen
Client Land Hessen
Typology Cultural building/Public building
Period of time 2013
Procurement Competition
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

Theaterlabor


Theatre Laboratory for the Institute of Applied Dramatics

The entry for the invited competition for a new Theatre Laboratory for the Institute of Applied Dramatics at the Justus-Liebig-University in Giessen utilizes the concept of an evolutionary platform to derive the design. This evolutionary platform gives the new laboratory its identity and connects it with the surrounding urban fabric. It also embodies the increasingly ambivalent character of contemporary drama: its spatial articulation enables open ended configurations of stages, spatial acoustics, video projections and installations that can evolve with the laboratory’s work. It motivates to transgress traditional boundaries between interior and exteriors, stage and spectator space.  The resulting building generates a flexible, spatial structure for experimental drama and for new dialogues between art and sciences, between academy and the public.

Heimatmuseum

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Stadt Frankfurt
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Period of time 20172019
Procurement Application Procedure
Project phases 14, 5 in parts
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

in ARGE with Blumenstein Arch.

Heimatmuseum


Conversion and restoration of a listed half-timbered house

Theaterplatz und Stadt Loggia

Location Aschaffenburg
Client Stadt Aschaffenburg
Typology Urban planning/Public building
Period of time 20012004
Procurement Competition
Project phases 29
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA


in ARGE with Lautenschläger Architekt



 


Theaterplatz und Stadt Loggia


Redesign of the theatre square and implementation of a »Stadtloggia«

Staatspark Hanau Wilhelmsbad

Location Hanau
Client Verwaltung staatl. Schlösser u. Gärten vertreten durch:

Hessisches Baumanagement (hbm), Regionalniederlassung Rhein/Main
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Area 3.500 m²
Period of time 2002-today
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 29
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA



 


Staatspark Hanau Wilhelmsbad


Conversion and restoration of a listed historic resort of 1777

Vinothek Kloster Eberbach

Location Eltville im Rheingau
Client hbm Hessisches Baumanagement, Regionalniederlassung West, Frankfurt a.M.
Typology Cultural building/Historic building/Public building
Area 610 m²
Period of time 2006
Procurement Direct commission
Project phases 15 + Artistic supervision
Project partner Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA

Vinothek Kloster Eberbach


Vinothek in the listed former wine press house of the monastery


 

INSTITUTE FOR CITY HISTORY IN THE FORMER CARMELITE MONASTERY

INSTITUTE FOR CITY HISTORY IN THE FORMER CARMELITE MONASTERY
Conversion and renovation of the listed monastery complex

Location Frankfurt am Main
Client Kulturamt, vertreten durch das Hochbauamt der Stadt Frankfurt am Main
Floor Area 7.697 m²
Completion 2011
Procurement Competition
Project Team processing by Scheffler + Partner Architekten BDA
Phases 29

The former Carmelite monastery in Frankfurt am Main was founded in the 13th century and extended as a late Gothic monastery complex in the 15th century. Large parts of the monastery building were destroyed during the Second World War. After reconstruction and restoration in the 1950s, the monastery is now home to the Institute of City History.

 

The Institute for City History, formerly the ‘City Archive’, is divided into several buildings with up to four storeys, in which a reference library with reading room, exhibition/seminar and lecture rooms are housed alongside the administrative rooms. The cloister, refectory and parlatorium now serve as event venues.

 

The overall refurbishment covers the façades and interiors as well as the outdoor facilities. The event rooms were brought up to the latest technical standards in terms of lighting, acoustics and burglar resistance and equipped with contemporary furnishings.

 

The former Carmelite monastery is a listed building. The murals by Jörg Ratgeb in the cloister and refectory are among the most important pre-baroque murals in Germany.

Day Care Centre Max Baginski

Location Bad Soden
Typology Public building
Period of time 2006
Procurement Direct Commission
Project phases Peer Review Process

Kindertagesstätte Max Baginski

Design of a nursery school

2nd round.