Showing posts with label Sports Centres. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sports Centres. Show all posts
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Sports Centre | Hackney Marshes | London | Stanton Williams
Hackney Marshes is best known as the London home of amateur Sunday League football. Stanton Williams was commissioned in 2008 to provide a new ‘Community Hub’ at the South Marsh, comprising new changing rooms, a café, and an education facility. They are housed in a welcoming, inclusive structure that recognises the special qualities of this place and connects with its wider setting, including the adjacent Olympic Park.
The Centre is embedded within the landscape, avoiding the ‘tabula rasa’ approach of many sports venues. Plugging a gap in the trees that surround the pitches, its massing minimises its impact on the site. The overall impression is one of horizontality, with changing rooms arranged in linear fashion at ground level............more
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Cultural | Sports and Convention Centre | Les 2 Alps | Herault-Arnod Architectes
The request of the client was clear: the project should be in a register "traditional", knowing that what is currently considered the traditional architecture of the Alps is actually a compilation of kitsch most diverse regional styles. We have been very reluctant to accept the conditions of the order, completely outside our usual areas of interest. Rather that the leak we decided to head on issues of kitsch and decor that are the reality of contemporary construction in the mountains, so that even modern functionalist architecture of the stations is gradually dressed in veneer stone and carved wood..........more
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Invited Competition | Sports Centre | Wels | Austria | K2 Architektur
Exteriors and interiors correspond with each other. The fitness rooms have direct visual and visual link to the River Traun. Turn, -, climbing and tennis court are glazed generously. The north side hall roof is a tectonic elevation of the sports field and to the stand. It is sport set compatible.
The functional areas of the new halls are spatially separated and individually playable. The central staircase connects them horizontally and vertically. Thus, a simplified external use of the new premises is possible. Optionally, the new building will be directly connected underground to the old building.
The new halls are not a mere addition to the stock. Take care of the historic ambience and is one urban revitalization on the banks of the River Traun.....more
Monday, May 4, 2009
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Sports Complex -Rouen, France-Dominique Perrault Architecture








location : rue Lillebonne, Rouen
competition: February 2006
start of conceptual design: September 2006
estimated construction start: Summer 2007
estimated completion: 2009
site area : 31 500 m2
built-up area : 13 500 m2
client : Communauté de l’Agglomération Rouennaise
engineers :Jean-Paul Lamoureux, Paris : acoustics
Alto Ingénierie, Champs-sur-Marne, fluids
Khephren Ingénierie, Arcueil : structur
Cabinet Ripeau, Boulogne-sur-Seine : economy
Saturday, April 11, 2009
RELAXX sport and leisure center-AK2













Architects: AK2
Location: Bratislava, Slovakia
Designers: Andrea Klimková, Peter Kručay
Project Year: 2008
Site Area: 5,418 sqm
Construction Area: 9,271 sqm
Photographs: Andrea Klimková, Ľubo Stacho
Via Archdaily
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Multisport Pavilion La Peña ,Bilboa By Coll-barreu-Arquitectos





The sports complex is a uneven volume that complies with multiples conditions that coexist in the lot .A semi transparente fencing of black concrete and glass tries to respond to the different situations generated between the transforming residential city and natural hillside profoundly affected by industrialization.
Built | 2006 | Bilbao |
Via
Friday, April 3, 2009
Monday, March 30, 2009
Sports Hall Bale-Croatia | 3LHD

More pictures here
Project Name: Sports Hall Bale
Location: Domenico Cernecca 3, Bale, Croatia
Author: 3LHD
Project team: Saša Begović, Marko Dabrović, Tatjana Grozdanić Begović, Silvije Novak, Ljerka Vučić, Marin Mikelić
Colaborators: Berislav Medić (UPI-2M, Structural Engineering), Robert Alar (UPI-2M, Structural Engineering) Mateo Biluš (B.M.P. Building Physics), Tomislav Fujs (Vodotehnika, MEP Engineering - Plumbing), Branko Ćorko (IPZ-elektroinženjering 22, Electrical Engineering), Igor Šundov (Rena prom, MEP Engineering - Mechanical)
Site area: 3.660m2
Gross floor area: 1.108m2
Volume: 6.084m3
Footprint: 984m2
Client: Bale Municipality
Start of planning: 2005
Completion: 2006
Building costs: 7,5M Kn / 1,0M €
Photos: Damir Fabijaniæ
Via
Sports & Culture Centre-Copenhagen, Denmark | Dorte Mandrup/b&k brandlhuber
















Architect: Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter Aps + b&k brandlhuber & co
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Project Year: 2006
Project team: Dorte Mandrup, Anders Brink, Lars Lindeberg, Jesper Henriksson, Arno Brandlhuber, Asterios Agkathidis, Markus Emde, Jochen Kremer, Martin Kraushaar, Sarah Breidert
Client: Copenhagen Municipality / LOA(Danish Foundation for Culture and Sports Facilities)
Engineer: Jørgen Nielsen Rådgivende ingeniører A/S
Contractor: NH Hansen & Søn A/S
Photographs: Torben Eskerod and Michael Reisch
Via
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