Community centre Herstedlund / Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter

Uploaded by — Filed under: Public Facilities ,Selected , , ,
 
© Adam Mørk

© Adam Mørk

Architect: Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter Aps
Location: Albertslund,
Client: Freja Ejendomme A/S
Constractor: N. H. Hansen og Søn A/S
Construction Engineer: Jørgen Nielsen A/S
Engineering, Electricity & Plumbing: Jens-Peter Madsen ApS
Landscape: Svend Kierkegaard A/S
Site Area: 875 sqm
Construction Area: 408 sqm
Project Year: 2009
Photographs: Adam Mørk

© Adam Mørk © Adam Mørk © Adam Mørk © Adam Mørk

Architectural Concept

Community Centre Herstedlund provides the framework for joint activities for a new residential area, housing approximately 600 families.

The site plan, designed by Juul & Frost, is based on the idea of “the forest and the glades”. We elaborated on this theme as we designed the building as a large stylized tree at the edge of a glade.

The programme of the building had to be very open and with the possibility to grow along with the new inhabitants. The community centre should be able to incorporate many different ages and interests over time, and many types of communities from the informal meeting around an event, summer festival, a big football or presentation to the special interests and common eating.

site plan

site plan

It will be a local user-driven house of culture where it is possible for multiple independent users to use the building at the same time. The building provides space for all kinds of smaller cultural events in the broadest sense.

It should be available to be used at all hours for teaching, dancing, sports, theatre, aerobics, yoga, barbecue, lectures, bridge tournament, children’s theatre and weddings.

Spatial Disposition

To exploit the square feet available we cross-programmed the scheme to use the building and surrounding area both independently and in a flow of spatial connections.

To emphasize the possibility of mix use, you may enter the building on both ground floor and directly to the first floor by an outdoor staircase.

outside space diagram

outside space diagram

In the following passage, we describe the different types of space and connections:

  • Ground level: Kitchen and toilet facilities. Staircase and lift connects the rest of the building.
  • 1. st. floor: Performance space, custodian / disposal
  • 2. nd. Floor: Multipurpose area, toilets and additional stocking space
  • 3. rd. floor: Roof terrace

The Community Centre is surrounded by common outdoor activities. There is direct access to the toilets so that they can be used for all outdoor activities.

A skate board ramp climbs the wall on one side, mountaineering wall on the other and through a hatch in the wall the indoor kitchen is connected to an outdoor barbequing area and eating facilities.

In summer time, the kitchen is the heart of outdoor events from summer festivals to Friday bars or spontaneous get-togethers. In the winter the kitchen could also be used as a satellite kitchen for private events in the settlement in addition to events in the building.

The Performance Space on the first floor extends the building’s layout by adding a staircase for audience to the volume. The walls lean out and emphasize a stage floor measuring approximately 50 sqm.

auditorium diagram

auditorium diagram

It is possible to close the room by shutting a sliding gate in the wall towards the entry. When closed, the stage floor may also be used for smaller events, when there is a need for a smaller spatial area. This is where the adults are drinking coffee after eating together, and this is where the hip hop dance team works out.

When open the Performance space is connected by an open staircase to the multipurpose area on the second floor.

The multipurpose space is the largest common space measuring 125 m2. Connecting the performance space is the perfect spatial combination for common eating and parties. Clearance and stowage of tables and food leftovers can be done without disturbing the simultaneous serving of drinks and warming up the dance floor.

The multipurpose space could also be the framework for bridge tournament or serve as a large meeting room which can function independently of the other floors.

© Adam Mørk

© Adam Mørk

The Roof terrace offers 145 m2 on the third floor under the sun. It has direct access from the main staircase and lift and contains a water line and a small enclosed court yard for ball playing. It is an out door space, covered with a net catching basket balls astray. It serves as a withdrawn out door space for joint events and complements common activities in the building.

Design and Materials

The construction is concrete columns and a deck construction of Filigree slabs. Stabilizing concrete elements represents the lift / stair case core.

The closed facades are self-supporting sandwich elements in steel.

Glass panels consist of energy glass with wood / alu -frames.

External cladding is carried out in a combination of solid or perforated anodized aluminium plates.

© Adam Mørk

© Adam Mørk

Interior walls are made of concrete and plaster.

The floor on the ground level is slip-resistant vinyl and the overlying levels are floors made with sealants free painted industrial floors.

The roof terrace is coated with rubber granules.

Ceilings are constructed of fibre glass stretched lanes with underlying acoustic absorbents and basic lighting.

Sustainability

The project meets the Tier 2 Energy, and has the following environmental initiatives included:

  • Solar panels on top of the stair cases in combination with soil heating.
  • Differential ventilation principles (Full mechanical, hybrid and control ventilation).
  • Possibility for thermo active decks using soil heating for cooling in the summer.
  • Collected Rainwater is used for flushing.
  • Omission of hot water in toilets.
  • Motion-controlled taps and lighting.
 
 
Thumb up Thumb down 0
jp says:

waiiiiit…. what? a skateboard ramp?! lol

…awweeesome dude.

 
# September 6, 2009 at 23:06
Thumb up Thumb down 0
Michael says:

It may look cool from the outside but the inside is poorly designed. None of these plans is well resolved… it’s a no for me!

 
# September 7, 2009 at 05:43
Thumb up Thumb down 0
pi says:

maybe it’s not the newest idea ..but i really like it .
the inside – there is no picture , but just looking at the pictures i can say it’s simple cause it’s small.

 
# September 7, 2009 at 08:05
Thumb up Thumb down 0
extranjero says:

look like unfinished experiment….

:(

 
# September 7, 2009 at 16:59
Thumb up Thumb down 0
dito says:

I think the point of this building is to be outside it, around it, skating it, climbing it.

Brilliant I say.

 
# September 7, 2009 at 20:03
Thumb up Thumb down 0
WJD says:

Hot cognitive social engineering.

(I want to see the inside also.)

Small community projects demand more from an architect because there is often too little money to build toward a more grand program. But, there is plenty of ambition and studied consideration in this project, and I sense the architects really desired to pull alot from a little.

 
# September 8, 2009 at 08:46
Thumb up Thumb down 0
awjuyg says:

this is good design. nice diagrams too….

 
# September 9, 2009 at 11:05
Thumb up Thumb down 0
Vitsee says:

i think this is great – the climbing wall and skate ramp are excellent – it is nice to see architects sacrificing some form for function on the exterior.

 
# September 10, 2009 at 04:04
Thumb up Thumb down 0
Miesgunnaroeyourboat says:

I like it, but the use of so many architectural elements is a turnoff. Also. I really dislike those pointless pointless (it deserved two) diagrams.

 
# April 13, 2010 at 11:22
Thumb up Thumb down 0

7:00 PM Jan 8th

Community centre Herstedlund / Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter | ArchDaily http://t.co/Y326B6T via @archdaily

Thumb up Thumb down 0

11:40 AM Feb 26th

community centre http://bit.ly/faFgdo Herstedlund / Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter #architecture via @ArchDaily

Thumb up Thumb down 0

9:20 AM Jul 15th

Community centre Herstedlund / Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter | ArchDaily #architecture http://t.co/RTeXN2w via @archdaily

Thumb up Thumb down 0

2:33 AM Jul 16th

Community centre Herstedlund / Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter | ArchDaily http://t.co/vquFvbP vía @archdaily

Leave a Reply »

 

Latest Comments »

Saying this is starchitecture is realy a lazy coment, if...[+]
awful lighting, it seems the Hard Rock Cafe[+]
Ow nooooo, it’s the bastard child of Zaha Hadid and Santiago...[+]
Decoracion de Interiores on Casa Mar / Coleman-Davis Pagan Arquitectos
Very nice and modern design. It’s simple but it...[+]
Beautiful building with dreadful lighting.[+]

Upcoming Architecture Events »

got events? invite us! click here

Architecture Books & Magazines »

Louis Kahn on the Thoughtful Making of Spaces / Michael Merrill

Louis Kahn on the Thoughtful Making of Spaces / Michael Merrill

From previously unpublished material and new analytic drawings this book explores Louis Kahn’s Dominican Motherhouse, his unbuilt masterpiece. Kahn pushed and prodded modern architecture into a crisis that questioned aspects of space that modernism had proudly banished from its…

 

London Unfurled / Matteo Pericoli

London Unfurled / Matteo Pericoli

If you haven’t finished all your holiday shopping, and you need something for someone who loves both architecture and London then we might have the right gift for you. We recently received Matteo Pericoli’s London Unfurled. This accordion-style book folds out…

 

Volume 27: Aging

Volume 27: Aging

I never can get enough of Volume. This issue is loaded with provocative articles that stimulate discussion about a pressing reality, the dramatic demographic shift in the age of human populations. Throughout this issue there are articles like Martti…

 

Our partners »

AD on iPad via Pulse

Browse by date »

Browse by category »

Friends »