Prinsessegade Kindergarten and Youth Club Winning Proposal / COBE + NORD Architects

Prinsessegade Kindergarten and Youth Club Winning Proposal / COBE + NORD Architects
Courtesy of COBE, NORD Architects, PK3 and Grontmij

Aimed at being a city for kids, the Prinsessegade Kindergarten and Youth Club Winning Proposal by COBE + NORD Architects, in collaboration with PK3 and Grontmij, will be the largest daycare center in all of Denmark. It also presents a big challenge – how to avoid creating a daycare factory when building an institution for so many users. Their design is not just one huge building, but rather a cluster of many small and varied buildings, grouped around two central streets that connect to the surrounding city structure. Like Copenhagen, it has different neighborhoods, different houses, different public spaces, squares and parks. More images and architects’ description after the break.

Copenhagen is growing! Projections show that by 2025, there will be up to 90.000 more inhabitants in Copenhagen than today. Of these 90,000 new inhabitants, 33,000 will be 18-29 years and a whopping 22.000 of these will be young people and children between 0 and 18 years! The site – a triangular plot in the Copenhagen borough of Christianshavn, wedged between the rigid urban block structure of Prinsessegade and the homegrown diversity of the Christiania Free Town – has been chosen as the frame of the good everyday life of 618 children and young people between age 0-18.

Courtesy of COBE, NORD Architects, PK3 and Grontmij

The design also has a city hall, a fire station, a restaurant, a stadium, a factory and a golden ballcage on the roof. Most buildings consist of a general city mass, based on a rational, modular construction system, while the special buildings of the city stand out both in terms of function and architecture. The Kids’ City is planned from a careful analysis of the site’s existing landscape, in order to emphasize and preserve as many of the present qualities as possible. The buildings are placed in such a way that the largest trees and most important landscape elements are preserved and incorporated into a large, green shared outside area – the heart of the Kids’ City. In addition to this, many new landscape elements, such as the city hall square and the beach, add diversity to the site’s existing qualities and allow many new outdoor activities and experiences.

Courtesy of COBE, NORD Architects, PK3 and Grontmij

The size and diversity of the Kids’ City means that everybody – children and young people as well as their parents – will feel at home. There’s room for the wild kids, the quiet kids, for the kids who like to draw and paint, the roleplayers, the ones who play in the sandbox, the ones that race down the mountain in mooncars and those who like to bake cookies in the kitchen. There’s room for the ones performing a musical in the city hall, the ones tinkering with their mopeds, the ones playing street basket in the cage and the ones kissing behind the bike shed.

Courtesy of COBE, NORD Architects, PK3 and Grontmij

Architects: COBE + NORD Architects Location: Copenhagen, Denmark Landscape Architects: PK3 Engineers: Grontmij Client: Copenhagen Municipality Program: Daycare, after school club and youth club Size: 4,200 m2 Status: 1st prize in competition 2012, completed end of 2014

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Cite: Alison Furuto. "Prinsessegade Kindergarten and Youth Club Winning Proposal / COBE + NORD Architects" 08 Nov 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/291035/prinsessegade-kindergarten-and-youth-club-winning-proposal-cobe-nord-architects> ISSN 0719-8884

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