BTV branch in Innsbruck / Rainer Köberl

© Lukas Schaller

Architects: Rainer Köberl Location: Innsbruck, Austria Architect In Charge: Rainer Köberl Project Year: 2011 Photographs: Lukas Schaller

BTV branch in Innsbruck / Rainer Köberl - More Images+ 15

Black and white squares cover the building in a regular pattern. It suggests a chessboard, but also has something of the white snow-covered mountains that surround Innsbruck. What really inspired Rainer Köberl for this new building on the edge of town he did not divulge to me. But one thing is for sure: he succeeded in making a strong statement. He created a building that can hold its own in an urban architectural jumble without having to resort to great formal contortions.

We are standing on Mitterweg, a street extremely busy with both car traffic and pedestrians. A building supply store, even several large supermarkets, schools, residential buildings and commercial enterprises extend along its right and left sides. The Vier Länder Bank, known as BTV for short, wanted to have a new building for a branch built here on Mitterweg and held a competition by invitation for its design. The jury was chaired by the Viennese architect Heinz Tesar, who had built the head office for BTV, the so-called Stadtforum (completed in 2006), in Innsbruck’s historic centre. In the course of the competition, the bank realised the property was actually too small for its needs and it did not award a prize. After being able to purchase an additional small lot adjoining the property, it invited the same participants to a second round. That provided the Innsbruck architect Rainer Köberl a good opportunity to give his design an edge. He kept the pointy cap-like shape rising up to a peak, but proposed a different material for the facade and was able to win the competition.

© Lukas Schaller

The striking feature of this bank building is its steeply rising roof – Köberl wanted to make the building as tall as possible so it is not swamped by the surrounding urban architectural jumble. Actually, only two storeys are allowed in this location. That is why the body of the building bends sharply towards the roof ridge from the second storey upward. Underscoring the shape is the striking pattern of the facade. Like a chessboard, the outer skin consists of square, concrete-coloured panels made of fibre-reinforced concrete alternating with black air holes of the same size. In order to be better able to gauge the size of the individual panels, Köberl recounts, he went to Vaduz.

© Lukas Schaller

There, Hans Jörg Göritz had realised a similarly steeply rising form of roof ending in a point for the Landesforum and Landesparlament (parliament) of the principality of Liechtenstein, though in this case of small-sized bricks. Using the measurements of the bricks, Köberl was then able to count up and calculate what seemed to him the right size of panel for his own building. Behind the facade’s outer skin, the reinforced concrete structure with glazing all around tapers towards the top like a stepped pyramid. A 60-centimetre-wide steel maintenance balcony is positioned between the glass skin and outer skin of the facade. Attached to it are steel struts which, in turn, hold the fibre-reinforced concrete panels. From the outside this net house allows hardly any views of the interior. From indoors, on the other hand, the dark squares scarcely obstruct the view out – better still, they help shut out the ugly neighbouring buildings and allow the focus on beautiful sights such as the silhouette of the mountains.

A concrete wall beginning its gradual ascent parallel to the garage entrance wraps once around the whole building at a certain distance from it, but then comes into contact with it on the east side after all. Round windows are cut into the wall here; they provide views into and out of the more public part of the bank. Everywhere else the wall protects the offices from direct view but, because it is at a distance, it lets enough daylight indoors and creates a small inner court planted with greenery.

© Lukas Schaller

The bank occupies the ground floor and the first upper storey. Downstairs are the staff offices, reception counter and self-service area. Upstairs are meeting rooms and a small terrace, popular for private telephone calls or short breaks for smoking. The bank rents out the top two storeys to a doctor and a shipping company respectively.

© Lukas Schaller

From the BTV branch it is a few minutes by car to another work of architecture by Rainer Köberl. This is a detached supermarket for the M-Preis grocery store chain, which became well-known far beyond state borders for the high architectural standard of its buildings. As in quite a few others belonging to this chain, one would like to be able to go shopping in this supermarket every day. But that pleasure is reserved only for residents of Innsbruck or the Tyrol.

© Lukas Schaller

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Cite: Javier Gaete. "BTV branch in Innsbruck / Rainer Köberl" 20 Sep 2012. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/273440/btv-branch-in-innsbruck-rainer-koberl> ISSN 0719-8884

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