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PATCH22, a Highrise in Wood, Wins the WAN 2016 Residential Award
FRANTZEN et al
The loggia balconies on the south side of the buidling are 2 to 2,4m wide offering the posibilitie of using it as a real extension to the interior. Several owners have installed bathtubs on the balconies. Due to the extra slide away single glass sheet windscreens the climate on these loggia balconies is always more moderate than outside conditions.
Photo credit:
Luuk Kramer
PATCH22, a Highrise in Wood, Wins the WAN 2016 Residential Award
FRANTZEN et al
In Patch22, ‘sustainability’ is achieved through energy efficiency, the use of renewable materials and great flexibility in the floor plan layout options. The 2009 design for Patch22 had a GPR score (a Dutch governmental Benchmark score) for sustainability of 8.9 and an EPC for energy efficiency of 0.2. The roof is entirely covered with PV panels, making the building energy-neutral. Rainwater is collected and reused in a grey water system. Heat is generated using CO2-neutral pellet stoves that use compressed waste wood from the timber industry as fuel.
Photo credit:
FRANTZEN et al
PATCH22, a Highrise in Wood, Wins the WAN 2016 Residential Award
FRANTZEN et al
The high-rise section of the 5400m2 building can be converted from commercial space into residential space and vice versa without any changesbeing needed to the structure. The storeys, which shift in and out in a playful manner, can be used as large loft apartments of up to 540m2 withhuge balconies, as up to eight smaller apartments or as open office space covering the entire floor thanks to the lack of structural division walls,the generous storey height of 4m and the high floor load of 4kN. Apartments can be subdivided or merged, and the division into apartments willremain flexible in the future.
Photo credit:
FRANTZEN et al
The CCA Presents the Exhibition "Phyllis Lambert: 75 Years At Work"
Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA)
Phyllis Lambert, David Sharpe, Myron Goldsmith, Jin Hwan Kim, and unidentified student, Master class studio, Crown Hall, Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), c. 1961.
Photo credit:
Phyllis Lambert fonds, CCA
The CCA Presents the Exhibition "Phyllis Lambert: 75 Years At Work"
Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA)
Pier Associates. Composite photograph of Phyllis Lambert and David Fix in their studio, 403-409 East Illinois St. Chicago, USA, c. 1970. Reproduction. Phyllis Lambert Archive, CCA
Photo credit:
© Pier Associates
The CCA Presents the Exhibition "Phyllis Lambert: 75 Years At Work"
Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA)
Ezra Stoller. View from northwest in the afternoon, 375 Park Avenue, New York, 1958Seagram Building, Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson, architects; Kahn and Jacobs, associate architects; Phyllis Lambert, Director of Planning. Gelatin silver print.
Photo credit:
CCA
The CCA Presents the Exhibition "Phyllis Lambert: 75 Years At Work"
Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA)
Ezra Stoller. Seagram Building, Mies van der Rohe and Philip Johnson, architects; Kahn and Jacobs, associate architects; Phyllis Lambert, Director of PlanningView from northwest at dusk, 375 Park Avenue, New York, 1958. Gelatin silver print.
Photo credit:
CCA