woensdag 16 november 2011

Amstelcampus in Amsterdam (Rockfon en Verwol) Architecten O3

Phone: 0031(0)655574636
Click to enlarge

Copyright Michael van Oosten Fotograaf


















                                              Copyright Michael van Oosten Fotograaf



About Rockfon

What does a ceiling mean to you?

... maybe the difference between a good and a bad day

It is often the things we fail to notice that have the most impact on our well-being. The ceiling above you for instance.
The Rockfon Group develop integrated ceiling solutions that provide you with better and safer indoor environments. And we do it by balancing technical characteristics and design with modern demands and trends.
We believe in thinking ahead when designing buildings that form the physical framework surrounding us and future generations. Our philosophy applies not only to design and daily use but also to the effect of building materials on our well-being and performance. Rockfon ceilings add value to buildings through pleasing aesthetic qualities and superior functional characteristics, improving the performance of the spaces they cover.

Part of Rockwool

Rockfon is a subsidiary of Rockwool International, the world's largest producer of stone wool products. Rockfon ceilings are manufactured at Rockwool's factories in the Netherlands, France and Poland and distributed through sales companies all over the world.

The production process

The base material of Rockfon ceiling products is stone wool (resin bonded mineral wool) produced according to the principles of a volcanic eruption. By means of patented technology, stone is melted and transformed into wool with binders being added. In the following processes, the wool is shaped and cut according to specification and turned into ceiling tiles of various sizes, thicknesses and densities. Finally, a finishing treatment is applied giving the tiles an elegant and attractive surface finish.

ACTIVATE YOUR CEILING

Rockfon develop intelligent ceiling solutions which actively address a number of important issues in modern buildings and renovation projects.
Rockfon products are known for their design, aesthetics and ease of installation; coupled with the key performance features of superior fire resistance and acoustics.
This ensures that our ceiling solutions are among the highest performing, most cost effective and time efficient in today’s interiors market.
The comprehensive ceiling solution portfolio from Rockfon ensures that our customers are able to actively add value to the construction process, by ultimately creating superior interior environments.
That is why we say “ACTIVATE YOUR CEILING”.


maandag 14 november 2011

Architect C,F, Moller Arhus Denmark




A.P. Moller School Germany

The ceilings in the school support the simplicityof the school’s design.

The A.P. Møller School is a gift of the A.P. Møller and Chastine McKinney Møller Foundation of Danish shipping magnate Maersk McKinney Møller to the Danish- speaking minority of Schleswig-Holstein in northern Germany. Danish Queen Margrethe inaugurated the school on September 1, 2008. The school is the second Danish-language school across the Danish border in Germany.
The A.P. Møller School is a Danish secondary school (7-10th grades) and a gymnasium constructed on former military land. There is room for 625 students in the 14,600–square-metre school. The three- storey building is built around two large, central spatial elements – one containing common areas with a canteen, reception hall and knowledge centre, the other with a large sports and multi-purpose hall with three arenas. The sloping roof connects these two spatial elements with yellow- brick masonry.
The building, with its slanting copper roof, is beautifully-situated in a lovely natural area with a view of Silen fjord and the copper towers of the Slesvig cathedral in the town of Schleswig.
The ceilings in the school support the simplicity of the school’s design. To add to the feeling of calm and simplicity, the architect firm C.F. Møller developed a lighting strip for the ceilings which contains both lighting and ventilation in the same band, contributing to the orderly feeling of the ceilings.
In many places, the ceilings are mounted as island solutions. The sound absorption qualities of these ceilings are excellent since the extremely stringent requirements for acoustics and sound absorption in school buildings must be met.
Phone: 0031(0)655574636
Click to enlarge
Copyright Michael van Oosten Fotograaf











Copyright Michael van Oosten Fotograaf





zaterdag 5 november 2011

KHR Architekter Denmark Copenhagen

Interview met Jan Søndergaard architect

A starship that just landed from outer space? Or a lost movie set from Star Wars? That’s what comes to mind the first time one sees this astonishing piece of land-art. Of course, it’s not a spaceship – but a Danish composite factory situated right next to one of Denmark’s busiest motorways just outside the town of Middelfart.
Even though it’s not a spaceship, it is definitely landscape art. No doubt about that. The Fiberline building is so distinctive and unusual that it’s already won several prizes, not least the European Steel Design Award 2007.
The jury awarded the Danish architect and Copenhagen University professor Jan Søndergaard and his architect firm KHR the European Steel Design Award 2007 for the Fiberline building because of its groundbreaking design and the way in which the building rises so magnificently out of the Danish landscape. And for the way he created a 330-metre-long hill that brings together production, product development, administration and logistics all in one unbroken open space. The jury wrote: “Fiberline is an exceptional example of the potential of steel to create slim, light constructions that are at the same time very competitive. The Fiberline building shows how functionality, aesthetics and values can be brought together in a higher unity.”
The Fiberline building was also nominated for the prestigious European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture, also called Mies van der Rohe Prize, in 2007. The prize is given to acknowledge and reward quality architectural production in Europe.
Rockfon spoke to Jan Søndergaard, the man behind this amazing piece of landscape art.
Søndergaard says he is very inspired by landscapes and wants to let his buildings become a part of the landscape. “I’m very inspired by the Scandinavian universe which is bound by the generations and our relationship to the land and the landscape. And by the light, and the special way the air moves between the mountains when one sails up the fjords. As far as Fiberline is concerned, I was very inspired by the old Viking fortresses with their circular walls such as Trelleborg outside Slagelse and Aggersborg by Limfjorden. Both fortresses were built around 980 AD.
So when it came to Fiberline, I asked myself, ‘is it possible to place a factory and a workplace in the landscape? Could we do that?’ So I thought, ‘could I take a knife and cut three large flaps in the landscape, and then lift them up and put light into them?’ And that’s exactly what we did. It’s a big and very precise form we’ve laid in the landscape which actually contains everything that belongs to the Fiberline universe. The factory itself, the parking places, the loading and unloading landings, the warehouse – everything is placed in the design itself. It’s all one form that contains everything and holds everything. There are no external parking lots with cars anywhere... so it is like a spaceship. You drive in, and everything’s in it. The whole building is a continuation of the landscape, and the high back of the building completely follows the landscape.
So the building is like three large cuts, and in here are the production facilities which are like a spinning mill. Since Fiberline makes composites – which are artificial materials made from combining raw materials – their products are hanging from the ceilings like threads. And then around all this, there are people sitting and working on the third level overlooking the production facilities. So it’s all one big open room with the offices, labs, administration, and everything else overlooking the production facilities. Everyone can see everything, but no one is bothered by any noise.”
With a total of 20,000 square metres, Fiberline is Denmark’s largest workspace. “It’s a question of creating ‘identities’,” says Søndergaard who started his career working for B&O. “I believe that when we are working with putting rooms together, there arises a joint understanding of one’s identity as a company. The building influences the way people feel about their workplace.” Fiberline’s open workspace is 100 metres wide by 200 metres long – and the whole building is 300 metres long.
“Visually, it’s as if the meeting rooms are hanging outside the building, but they are a part of the building,” says Søndergaard. “And the stairways are all open – so when you go upstairs, it’s as if you are swinging in the air. The people down on the production floor really enjoy having people upstairs and around them, because all they see are silhouettes working above and around them.”
According to Søndergaard, acoustics weren’t the biggest problem in creating such a large workspace, but fire safety regulations were because you simply aren’t allowed to make such big rooms without guaranteeing them. “So at Fiberline, we had to make some divisions, and we also have sprinklers in the big windows to meet fire regulations. And these windows also help the soundproofing in the big production room. But in the long galleries where people are sitting upstairs, we had to find the right balance when it comes to sound. You don’t want to make a room that is completely ‘dead’ in terms of sound because then it’s not inspiring to work in. People are inspired by each other, so the indoor climate is important – and this is where we used Rockfon ceilings.
The people who are actually sitting in this space are really satisfied with the result because the space has exactly the amount of reverberation they wanted. But the ceilings really get to work hard in this building – and they are up to the challenge. And the result is a space that’s very comfortable to sit in and which provides the inspiration that comes from sitting with other people.”
Originally Søndergaard was against lowered ceilings, and in his previous works such as the much acclaimed Pihl headquarters in Copenhagen, everything was visible, even the sprinkler systems. And in the big workspace at Fiberline, it’s the same. But Søndergaard used Rockfon Sonar ceilings in the offices because he wanted a completely-controlled look in the office space. “And it really is a beautiful look. We put lights, electrical installations and the tracks all into the Rockfon Sonar system, and the result is really beautiful. It’s a very good solution to use Rockfon system ceilings because it gives a freedom in terms of managing the technical installation while creating ceilings that aesthetically are beautiful to look at. The ideal ceilings should appear as if they have a controlling effect. In other words, they should bring together everything we’re doing. You should be able to read from the ceiling that a building is clarified and well thought through. And that everything is integrated by means of the ceilings.
We also used Mono Acoustic in the meeting rooms, and here we decided to experiment – and use Rockfon’s Mono Acoustic on the walls because we wanted the rendered and plastered surface as a contrast to the rest of the surfaces.
We’ve been happy to use Rockfon system ceilings at Fiberline because they clearly support the whole idea that Fiberline’s products are composites made of different products. So we wanted to tell that story – and we’re very happy with the ceilings because everything is built into the ceilings (ventilation, lights etc.). And we’ve tried to break or penetrate the ceilings as little as possible. The only things you can actually see are the fire detectors (they were the only things we couldn’t hide). Everything else is hidden. We selected Rockfon ceilings mostly because of appearance, not so much because of fire safety, because we think it’s a beautiful product.”
Phone: 0031(0)655574636
Click to enlarge
                                             Copyright Michael van Oosten Fotograaf





Copyright Michael van Oosten Fotograaf



Le Monde (newspaper in Paris)

Phone: 0031(0)655574636
Click to enlarge