Project Details
- Project Name
- Engel & Völkers Headquarters and Apartments
- Architect
- Richard Meier & Partners Architects
- Client/Owner
- Engel & Völkers
- Project Types
- Mixed-Use
- Project Scope
- Interiors
- Size
- 373,938 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2018
- Shared by
- August King
- Team
-
Richard Meier, Bernhard Karpf
, Design Principals
Parsa Khalili, Anne Strüwing, Project Architects
Kevin Browning, Bori Kang, Amalia Rusconi-Clerici, Steven Sze, Collaborators
Ringo Offermann, Project Manager
Kevin Browning, Pablo Costa, Alejandro Guerrero, Henry Jarzabkowski, Bori Kang, Aung Thu Kyaw, Sharon Oh, Steven Sze , Collaborators
- Project Status
- On the Boards/In Progress
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
Engel & Völkers’ new headquarters and apartments in Hamburg is a building with a unique approach presented by the classic challenge of transparency, organization, and form within a courtyard building typology. While following the urban requirements of the HafenCity district, the building provides a new perspective on the usual disposition of the courtyard typology.
The design of the project began with a pairing of the courtyard building with the organizational system of a hybrid building that contains a multiplicity of different programmatic uses such as apartments, training academy, offices and retail spaces within a singular and identifiable building. The organization of these various disparate programmatic uses are planned uniquely to provide the maximum benefits for each use in plan and section. The exterior of the building reads as a continuous and evenly articulated shell with elaborations that trace the internal differences of the project. The interior contains and reveals a series of shared experiences of its disparate parts.
The courtyard itself is transformed into an atrium as central circulation core and as an urban living room in the tradition of grand hotel lobbies. Its ceiling divides the public domain (training academy, shop, café and gallery) below from the private functions (residential and office) above but also unifies them through the introducing of natural light and views through a skylight.
In addition to the building structure the building is defined by the open and spacious, light-flooded interiors with ceiling-height doors and floor-to-ceiling windows open to the city, the Elbe River, and the city port. Residents of the apartments will also enjoy access to a private gym situated on the 16th floor with panoramic views of Hamburg.
Each floor of the building is a study in balancing transparency and natural light with various degrees of privacy and opacity required for the residential and office interiors by stringent sustainability specifications. The 16-storey ensemble aspires to contribute to the redevelopment of Hamburg’s HafenCity district and to the skyline of the city.