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Foundation for Polish Science Headquarters  

Foundation for Polish Science Headquarters

Warsaw, Poland

Project of the Day on Jun 21, 2019
Project Featured on Jun 21, 2019
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PGE GiEk Concern Headquarters

Foundation for Polish Science Headquarters

Warsaw, Poland

Project of the Day on Jun 21, 2019
Project Featured on Jun 21, 2019
Firm
STATUS
Built
YEAR
2014
SIZE
10,000 sqft - 25,000 sqft
The intent of the project was to preserve the character of the 1933 dilapidated multi-family house, which had been seriously mutilated by air bombing during WWII, while converting it into an environmentally friendly and modern office space.

Simultaneously, precious architectural and historically significant elements were safeguarded, adhering to the restraints postulated by the Warsaw Preservation Office in regards to building mass and window layout.

The building’s location, inside a sparse subdivision and established in the 1930s, influenced the multilayered integration of the project within the green context and public space. The investment strove to reduce its impact on the municipal infrastructure and the natural environment.

Liquidation of the fence in front of the building helped to enlarge the public space of the street and incorporate the backyard garden with it. The addition of an internal atrium and perforation through the ground level, beginning with the main entrance, established a visual link between the outside and inside, between the street and the garden.

The integrating tool to connect the building to its green context is the successful application of the first in the region external vertical garden onto both front and side elevations. The rain water collected into the retention basin irrigates the vertical garden and eliminates the demand for the municipal network. An 82 percent of the relatively small town plot, taking into account the vertical garden, is covered with surfaces allowing natural water retention.

Access to natural light was given to 96 percent of the above ground levels space. The ground level and underground parking lot (overhead skylights), reached the highest possible ratio, and 100 percent of those spaces has access to natural light.

Preservation of the original internal staircase, including the green terrazzo steps and landings filled with tiny, colorful “corset” ceramic tiles (nearing extinction) recalls the atmosphere of similar buildings of the era located in Paris, Amsterdam, and Brussels.

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