Azure

GRAPHIC ADAPTATION

In Amsterdam, creative studio Thonik teams up with MMX Architects to fashion a sustainabl­e, ultra-versatile headquarte­rs that will evolve with the city

- WORDS _Giovanna Dunmall PHOTOS_ Ossip van Duivenbode

For a creative company, one way to avoid the intractabl­e cycle of moving to an affordable neighbourh­ood, helping to earn it a hip cachet, then being priced out and having to start all over again is to buy your own property. Or, better yet, to build it from scratch so you can knit in the sort of tailor-made spaces you really need. That’s what Amsterdam-based graphic design studio Thonik has done — twice. In the late 1990s, it transforme­d a nondescrip­t hidden inner courtyard in the east of the city with a colourful home-cum-studio designed by Dutch architectu­re practice MVRDV. Then came outright gentrifica­tion. “Everybody wants to live and work in that area now because it’s an oasis in the middle of the city,” explains Thomas Widdershov­en, who co-founded Thonik with Nikki Gonnissen.

In 2008, the pair leased another small plot of land on a wide postwar boulevard in the centre of Amsterdam to build a larger studio for their growing team. It took longer this time — 12 years, in fact — but earlier this year, they finally moved into their new six-storey HQ. The slender building, which dazzles with its highly graphic gridlike facade (inspired by the Mexcellent typeface and logo made for the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City), was designed by Widdershov­en in collaborat­ion with Arjan van Ruyven of Amsterdam-based MMX Architects. The grey and off-white cladding is made from a high-pressure laminate called Trespa that, while not convention­ally used in upscale architectu­re, wows with its deep and sophistica­ted tones. What’s more, the recyclable material has a small carbon footprint: It’s largely made from trees grown near the manufactur­er’s factory in the southeaste­rn part of the Netherland­s.

Inside the building, Thonik chose to erect as few internal walls as possible to allow for maximum flexibilty. Instead, the company opted for cupboards and bookshelve­s as room dividers, all brought over from its previous studio. Upcycling as an ethos was central to the interior outfitting. “We also re-used the tables Richard Hutten designed for our second studio in 2000, the woollen carpets we made for an exhibition at the Shanghai Museum in 2008 and the modular kitchen we bought for our third studio in 2009,” says Widdershov­en.

Even with these ready-made elements, it took over a decade to complete the project. And the

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 ??  ?? ABOVE: The graphic design studio created the bespoke rugs (such as this one echoing the facade), while fellow Dutch talent Bart Guldemond designed the cabinets and room dividers — all of which made their way over from Thonik’s previous location.
ABOVE: The graphic design studio created the bespoke rugs (such as this one echoing the facade), while fellow Dutch talent Bart Guldemond designed the cabinets and room dividers — all of which made their way over from Thonik’s previous location.

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