When Mixed-Use Architecture Uses Open Facades to Make Friends

Let’s talk. Good communication is key to building and maintaining working relationships, be they personal, romantic, business, or geopolitical. The importance of communication with and respect for one’s neighbors is a lesson that has featured heavily in many texts and teachings from all religions and cultures for millennia, possibly sparking civilization itself. 

Some of the fastest growing economies are keen to shout from their garden rooftops about their growing environmentalism, infrastructure, attractive investment opportunities, and rising architectural scene, but also to keep alive the history and culture of their past, and build socially active environments.

These four building projects from across East Asia and Europe both visually and symbolically invite guests inside to see how they operate, building positive relationships with residents of the building and the city, and visitors from beyond.


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CapitaSpring / BIG + Carlo Ratti Associati

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© Finbarr Fallon

Singapore is a city-state well known for blending environmentalism with its architectural scene, with decades worth of green building projects, such as the Gardens by the Bay’s 18 super trees, sprouting up from the once-concreted urban floor. Capita Spring is another urban construction that not only seems to bleed green but actually pulls apart its skin to prove it. ‘At multiple elevations, the vertical elements comprising the building’s exterior are pulled apart,’ explain the architects, Carlo Ratti Associati, ‘to allow glimpses into the green oases.’

The building communicates with the public by adding accessible green public environments, without sacrificing commercial floorspace. The facade is stretched and pinched to reveal an 18m-high ground floor cavity forming public walkways and cycle routes, for example, while at the facade-defining heart of the building, ‘four connected levels of organic softscape’ are added. The resulting 35m-tall open-air garden ensures the tower becomes another icon of architectural environmentalism for the city.

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© Finbarr Fallon

Red Hole Commercial Building / OHOO Architects

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© Bae Jihun

Instead of cutting away part of its facade to reveal an unexpected space underneath, when the Red Hole Commercial Building in South Korea removed a chunk of its exterior wall, it instead presented a rather common one. A staircase. By animating the facade with the action of moving visitors, the form adds liveliness to the local landscape, becoming ‘one of the street’s most gazed at and visited buildings,’ as OHOO architects put it.

By combining white render and red brick, the interior and exterior elements of the building facade meet to form a contrast that diverges the two, ‘making the building resemble a piece of bitten-off red velvet cake,’ according to OHOO architects, who added red ‘in between gaps in the twisted form of the facade to give it character.’

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© Bae Jihun

Museum of Modern Aluminum Thailand / HAS design and research

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© W Workspace

As a building that narrates Thailand’s history with aluminum and its relationship with the country’s economy, the MoMA (Museum of Modern Aluminium) in Bangkok places its exhibitions behind a suitably futuristic facade. Thousands of simple suspended aluminum profiles combine with LED lighting to dance on the museum’s front and side facades, inspired both by swaying dandelion puffs and the fireflies of nearby Ko Kret island.

The carefully arranged facade gives approaching visitors a sense of faster-than-light inertia as they’re transported through the wormhole entrance into the space. Once inside, however, the facade itself follows them in. ‘The aluminum strips,’ explains project architects HAS Design and Research, ‘extend straight through the tunnel space, filtering and dampening the noise of the external environment and guiding visitors.’

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© W Workspace

Sluishuis Residential Building / BIG + Barcode Architects

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© Ossip van Duivenbode

Sluishuis cuts an imposing figure, sitting above Amsterdam’s IJmeer like a tactical rampart. But the residential building invitingly opens up at both ends, communicating and welcoming viewers and visitors from both land and sea. Where the structure meets the water, for example, the lower corner of the Sluishuis seems to simply disappear, welcoming traveling mariners to its floating jetty promenade like a pirate’s cove. Thanks to the resulting sloped facade, ‘the apartments at the bottom of the cantilever,’ explain architects BIG, Sluishuis boasts a unique feature ‘with stunning views over the IJ and directly onto the water.’

At the opposite corner of the structure, meanwhile, a facade of stepped apartment terraces – cut in half with a public-access staircase, leading to a rooftop pathway – ‘creates surprising sightlines and exchanges with the city and beyond. ‘Stimulating contact with the water by introducing various mooring places, sitting decks and floating gardens,’ suggest the architects, Sluishuis’s many-angled facade ensures the water of the IJmeer becomes a prominent aspect of its architecture.

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© Ossip van Duivenbode

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Cite: James Wormald. "When Mixed-Use Architecture Uses Open Facades to Make Friends" 06 Jun 2023. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1001509/when-mixed-use-architecture-uses-open-facades-to-make-friends> ISSN 0719-8884

© Ossip van Duivenbode

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