Project Details
- Project Name
- Coffee Plaza
- Architect
- Richard Meier & Partners Architects
- Client/Owner
- Neumann Gruppe; DS-Bauconcept
- Project Types
- Office
- Size
- 291,702 sq. feet
- Shared by
- Xululabs
- Consultants
-
Structural Engineer: Weber Poll Ingenieurbüro für Bauwesen,Electrical Engineer: DS-Plan Ingenieurgesellschaft für Ganzheitliche Bauberatung und Generalfachplanung,null: DS-Plan Ingenieurgesellschaft für Ganzheitliche Bauberatung und Generalfachplanung,DS-Plan Ingenieurgesellschaft für Ganzheitliche Bauberatung und Generalfachplanung,DS-Plan Ingenieurgesellschaft für Ganzheitliche Bauberatung und Generalfachplanung,Taubert und Ruhe Beratungsbüro für Akustik und Thermische Bauphysik,Peter Andres Beratende Ingenieure für Lichtplanung,Piscatello Design Centre,Civil Engineer: IGB Ingenieurgesellschaft,Masuch+Olbrisch,I.F.I. Institut für Industrieaerodynamik,TAW Weisse International,Drees & Sommer,Salzhuber und Frühling,Architekten Ingenieure PSP,Taubert und Ruhe Beratungsbüro für Akustik und Thermische Bauphysik
- Project Status
- Built
Project Description
Category: Work
Citation
Hamburg’s Coffee Plaza is a 291,500-square-foot center for international coffee trade that includes the ovoid headquarters for Neumann Kaffee Gruppe, along with two additional office buildings and a large public plaza. The site is key to ambitious redevelopment efforts seeking to reinvent Hamburg’s once-industrial port as a business and cultural center.
Raised on a podium overlooking nearby Sandtorpark, the oval-shaped tower mediates the separation between the park and plaza. Inside, behind a ventilated façade, the oval configuration improves visual and physical connections between the office workers, resulting in greater collaboration. “This project is potentially a new take on a minimal floor plate with an emphasis on minimizing circulation,” juror Hilary Sample said, noting that the project speaks “to a new idea about scale in the workplace. It’s more intimate.”
Some jurors questioned the efficiency of building three buildings, with three costly elevator cores, instead of one. But overall, the jury lauded the project’s accomplishment as an urban design gesture, creating relationships between three discrete elements—and the surrounding neighborhood—rather than introducing one massive tower to the area. “The oval building … is scaled to fit very nicely in that part of Hamburg,” juror Raymund Ryan said. “It makes for a civilized city.”