Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Chair, Facade, Windows, CourtyardToolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Image 3 of 12Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Image 4 of 12Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Windows, GlassToolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - More Images+ 7

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Table, Lighting, Chair
Courtesy of Caterina Tiazzoldi

Text description provided by the architects. Toolbox is a professional incubator realized in an industrial building in the city of Torino.

The project is believed to meet the needs of a city in a phase of substantial transformation.

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Chair, Windows
Courtesy of Caterina Tiazzoldi

At a time when, with a laptop and a Wi-Fi connection, it is possible to work from anywhere, the question emerging is what professional space is needed for. How is it possible to design a space combining users’ plurality with the coherence of the whole design? How is it possible to mediate between a need for socialization and privacy, between relaxation and concentration?

sketch

From the functional point of view, the project consists in the creation of an open space with 44 individual workstations combined with other services and activities. The goal has been to keep the modular concrete structure unaltered.

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Image 3 of 12
Courtesy of Caterina Tiazzoldi

The main span of the building has been divided lengthwise by a series of ‘filter volumes’ used as technical spaces for storing lockers and equipment. On one side, there is the co-working space, on the other side, the corridors and the functional ‘box’ containing shared facilities such as meeting rooms, print rooms, informal meeting spaces, mailboxes, a patio and a kitchen.

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Image 4 of 12
Courtesy of Caterina Tiazzoldi

From the perspective of the design process the goal was to mediate between the plurality of users' needs and the coherence of the design. The concept of the project derives from the combinatorial Adaptable Component model developed by Caterina Tiazzoldi within the context of the research Lab NSU at the Politecnico di Torino and Columbia University. The variety of solutions is obtained by use of a unique design rule. A set of initially identical volumes acquire specialization or differentiation through the use of different materials (cork, rubber, polished paint according to the programmatic function hosted in the box. The specialization of a generic volume occurs in accordance with a specialization generated by sound, thermal, and visual requirements.

plan

The goal was to convey a harmonious coexistence of different worlds and cultural references. The principle of variation and transformation of a unique element was also pursued in other parts of the project by differentiating the colors of natural rubber floors in the meeting rooms, sound insulation coating alternating with small telephone pods and finally by varying the sizes, colors and levels of transparency of the bubbles that form the external texture of the box-bar.

The concept uses a very few items in endless variations, a single system developing an infinite range of possibilities to respond to the plurality of users’ needs.

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Windows, Glass
Courtesy of Caterina Tiazzoldi

This concept has driven every design choice. The walls of the entrance have been achieved with 500 variations of one single white box. The overall design was obtained with parametric software generating endless configurations from a single digital model. Similarly, conditioning grids have been obtained from a single parametric model that recalculates the size and position of the holes based on the exchange of air required in each environment.

The same principle was also applied in the management of space oriented towards sustainable flexibility, a flexibility which is not based on the transformation of physical space but on a variety of uses obtained through the use of a few combinatorial functions (co-working, meeting rooms, kitchen, patio, parking). It is a flexibility permitting the derivation of an almost limitless number of scenarios. An automated system for centralised control of lighting, access, and services (printers, telephones) allows each user to have a profile designed according to their needs. The management of the space is therefore related to an automated system that allows or denies the use of certain functions in accordance with users' profiles. In this way the automated system allows us to reduce direct friction between people with regard to the modality of use of the space. Automation has become a tool of socialisation in a space in which interaction between users is very strong.

Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi - Image 6 of 12
Courtesy of Caterina Tiazzoldi

Thanks to its unique features, Toolbox is an urban concept that draws its strength from the complexity, variety, and changeability of the contemporary city.

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Project location

Address:Turin, Italy

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Toolbox / Caterina Tiazzoldi" 14 Oct 2010. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/81630/toolbox-caterina-tiazzoldi> ISSN 0719-8884

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