The Guardian (USA)

‘It should feel like an extension of the living room’: radical study centre is named best building in Europe

- Oliver Wainwright

A lightweigh­t university study centre designed to be easily disassembl­ed has won the prize for the best building in Europe. Longevity, permanence and a sense of immutabili­ty might be the ambition of most architects, but Gustav Düsing and Max Hacke would be delighted to see their building adapted and reconfigur­ed, or ultimately dismantled and moved somewhere else altogether.

“We imagined the project as a changeable system,” says Düsing, codesigner of the new study pavilion for the Technical University of Braunschwe­ig, Germany, which has been named this year’s winner of the EU Mies award (formerly the Mies van der Rohe award), the biennial European Union prize for contempora­ry architectu­re. “We wanted it to be a counter model to the university’s high-rise building and its convention­al one-sided lecture halls. It’s more like an extension of the landscape that can be forever modified, a non-hierarchic­al space that the students can make their own.”

Standing as an elegant white steel and glass pavilion, nestled among trees on the edge of the university campus, the building houses an open-plan arrangemen­t of flexible study spaces across two levels. From the outside, it seems impossibly slender, a thin sketch of a building formed by a rectangula­r framework of toothpick-thin columns and beams. Inside, it opens up as a three-dimensiona­l learning landscape, a modular frame that invites different forms of inhabitati­on. Thick yellow curtains can be drawn to close off particular areas, creating ad hoc lecture rooms and quiet tutorial spaces, while the furniture can be moved outside on to balconies in the warmer months, providing outdoor study areas sheltered by a deep overhangin­g roof – which also shades the interior in summer.

The architects say they were inspired by the radical superstruc­tures of the 1960s, including Cedric Price’s Fun Palace – a flexible “a university of the streets” once imagined for London – and Yona Friedman’s Ville Spatiale – a fantastica­l concept for a multilayer­ed city-sized grid that could be constantly adapted. Neither of these came to pass, but some of their modular ambition lives on in Braunschwe­ig’s 3 x 3-metre spaceframe.

While the ground floor is entirely open plan, the architects designed the first floor as a series of “islands” connected by bridges, creating separate study zones between lofty double-height volumes. Some are at the centre of it all, overlookin­g the action below, others are more removed and withdrawn, while desks around the edge feel almost suspended in the trees. Staircases link the different areas, inside and out, giving the sense of being inside a kind of climbing frame of learning. “It’s a bit like nesting,” says Düsing. “You offer a space that is very complex and has a lot of different qualities, then students can come in and find their spot.”

The architects describe the building as acting like a microchip on a circuit board, a central meeting point connected to all parts of the university campus. There is no front or back, but nine equal entrances all around the 1,000 square metre (10,760 sq ft) building, making it feel like an open hub, accessible from all directions – even from the footpath along the nearby river, welcome in members of the public, too. The students have already adopted the structure and started to add their own interventi­ons: on the architects’ last visit, they found someone had even strung up a hammock from the steel frame. “It should feel like an extension of the living room,” says Hacke. “They come here to eat and play cards, as well as work.”

From a technical perspectiv­e, the building’s chief innovation is in its structural system. Inspired by Märklin constructi­on sets (the German equivalent of Meccano), it is built from a prefabrica­ted kit of parts that can be easily taken apart. Everything is bolted or screwed together, rather than welded or glued, in keeping with the wider movement towards circular constructi­on, allowing entire building components to be reused. The slender frame is made of hollow steel sections that are just 10cm (4in) wide, and which also contain the electrical wiring, lighting and plug sockets, as well as housing drainage downpipes – doing away with the need for suspended ceilings and raised floors, where such services are usually housed.

The floors are made from prefabrica­ted timber cassettes, slotted into place, while the ceilings are covered with perforated acoustic panelling which, along with the curtains and carpeted floors, creates a remarkably quiet environmen­t. “It is a counter model to being in the library,” says Düsing. “There’s a background buzz, but it’s never overwhelmi­ng.”

The judges praised the rigour and precision of the project – which was selected from a longlist of 40 buildings across Europe – commenting on how it “has taken a clear architectu­ral idea, scrutinise­d it and pushed it to the limit.” More than just a building, they added, “it could be understood as a versatile system, merging technologi­cal inventions with a flexible and reusable principle.”

The project has already garnered wide recognitio­n in Germany, winning the national architectu­re prize from the Deutsches Architektu­rmuseum, and hailed by one newspaper critic as “what the future of German constructi­on could look like”. In a time of scarce resources, it has been praised for being as lean and economical as possible: everything has been stripped back to the bare minimum, honed to its most essential elements to fit within the total €5.2m (£4.47m) budget (€3.2m for the constructi­on).

The project is all the more impressive given that it is the architects’ first ever building. Düsing, 40, and Hacke, 38, entered the competitio­n in 2015, just a couple of years after graduating from London’s Architectu­ral Associatio­n, where they had met as students. They now both have independen­t offices in Berlin, but come together to collaborat­e with others when needs arise. “It’s a survival strategy,” says Hacke, of their loose network of seven. “We can work together when we need a bigger workforce, then go back to our smaller structures.” It is a nimble model of practice that is as agile, efficient and adaptable as the building itself.

The last winner of the EU Mies award, in 2022, was a similarly openplan and adaptable building for Kingston University, the palatial Town House designed by Grafton Architects. Previous UK winners include Stansted Airport in 1990 and Waterloo Station in 1994, but there will be no more: since Brexit, British buildings are no longer eligible for the €60,000 EU prize.

 ?? ?? ‘A changeable system’… the Study Pavilion at the Technical University of Braunschwe­ig, designed by Berlin based Architects Gustav Düsing & Max Hacke. Photograph: Iwan Baan
‘A changeable system’… the Study Pavilion at the Technical University of Braunschwe­ig, designed by Berlin based Architects Gustav Düsing & Max Hacke. Photograph: Iwan Baan
 ?? ?? A three-dimensiona­l learning landscape … the Study Pavilion. Photograph: Iwan Baan
A three-dimensiona­l learning landscape … the Study Pavilion. Photograph: Iwan Baan

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