Architecture studio Studioninedots plans a new residential tower following the idea of "urban rooms" near the town hall of the city of Almere, in the Netherlands. The city is characterized by having suffered a loss of inhabitants in recent years, but it is still a place where housing is limited.

Urban rooms can be described as intimate and urban interior and exterior spaces that flow together and encourage you to walk through them. Each urban room sparks its own sense of wonder, but always leaves its use to your imagination. Thus, the new building is projected with a strong, but abstract appearance, inviting your own interpretation of the spaces it surrounds.
Highnote designed by the architecture studio Studioninedots is a building with 157 homes conceived as a triangular plinth whose edges appear as a continuous colonnade that outlines the sequence of urban rooms, which serve as a place to meet, work, relax and study.

The building stands out among its surroundings thanks to its characteristic color, due to its construction with red concrete, and its stepped and inclined volume with a changing silhouette from all angles. The light creates color changes on the façade depending on its angle of incision. Furthermore, the façade is built with robust concrete columns with deep angled openings that create a play of light and shadow.


Highnote by Studioninedots. Photograph by Sebastian van Damme.
 

Project description by Studioninedots

We’re thrilled to present the finalised Highnote, a new residential tower for starters in Almere and the latest addition to the city skyline. For the design, we came up with a unique feature: a triangular plinth that consists entirely of 'urban rooms'. They are intimate, urban indoor and outdoor spaces, flowing into each other and enticing you to wander through them. Each urban room sparks its own sense of wonder, yet always leaves its use to your imagination.

Along the edges of the entire plot, one continuous colonnade contours the urban room sequence. Its appearance is strong yet abstract, inviting your own interpretation of the spaces it surrounds. Together, the urban rooms create the gradual transition from the buzzing city to the private homes in the tower.

The city of Almere has a quickly rising number of young and starting city dwellers, yet there is still limited housing in the city centre. The municipality aims to turn the centre more sustainable, green and dense. Pedestrians are prioritised: by linking existing and future squares and places with their own characters and functions, a new green walking strip through the city centre is emerging.


Highnote by Studioninedots. Photograph by Sebastian van Damme.

Until only recently, there was a stony and barren residual site, lying fallow along one of the city axes to the heart of Almere. The municipality had the ambition to repurpose the site into one of these new urban destinations, merging quality housing for a wide range of starters with healthy living space and unexpected functions that generate new liveliness in public. The plot’s compact, triangular shape raised additional challenges for this desire.


"We embraced the plot’s shape and converted its challenge into the design bedrock. With this, we created the opportunity for not just a new landmark in the skyline, but especially an expressive public base, which arouses your curiosity as you pass by and gives back an attractive destination to the city."

Vincent van der Klei, partner

The urban rooms within are new places to meet up, work, relax, study: they are spaces designed to inspire, fostering you to use them as you see fit. So, characterful yet as versatile as possible, the urban rooms are adaptable to current and future needs.


Highnote by Studioninedots. Photograph by Sebastian van Damme.

We conceived the square on the west side to be transparent and open, welcoming the people entering from the city center. This square, or as we call it the Werf, is set to initially become the site for art installations and public events for residents and the neighborhood. In parallel, it will co-function as an outdoor workspace for adjacent creative maker spaces to be installed inside. Along the alley lies the Hof — a contrasting, sheltered space through which new walking paths with seating elements wind. This area brings a luscious green garden, providing a space of tranquility and flooding with daylight at certain times of the day. On top of the lower, south-facing volume lies the Dak, a rooftop garden offering the residents their own 450 sqm, green space to host a birthday party, organize a sports class, or just take a break from the hustle and bustle of the city. At the base of the tower, is an internal cultural area with workspaces, to which a café and restaurant will be added this year.

On top of this public program, the tower volume accommodates 157 homes of which, for the first time in Almere, 67 ‘friends’ apartments for two sharing tenants. On its prominent location next to the city hall, Highnote now marks the entrance to the heart of the city.


Highnote by Studioninedots. Photograph by Sebastian van Damme.

The stepped, leaning volume and signature color make Highnote stand out in Almere's cityscape, with a changing silhouette from all angles. We opted for a monochromatic, soft red concrete facade that seems to shift in color throughout the day and soothes the rectilinear grid. Each volume has its facade rhythm, reinforcing the stacked building configuration.

The facade is built with robust concrete columns with deep, angled recesses that create a play of light and shadow. At street level, the facade flows smoothly into the mystical colonnade. We implemented load-bearing, prefabricated facade elements throughout, allowing the building to be constructed in a tight timeframe and virtually scaffold-free. Highnote's structure allows the entire building to remain flexible in its configuration, now and in the future.

Highnote by Studioninedots.
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Architects
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Project team
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Albert Herder, Vincent van der Klei, Metin van Zijl, Stijn de Jongh, Eva Souren, Ania Bozek, Sem Holweg, Isabel Albert Lopez, Marina Bonet.

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Collaborators
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Heddes Bouw & Ontwikkeling, Van der Vorm Engineering BV, Cauberg Huygen, Flux landscape architecture.

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Client
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Gebiedsontwikkelaar AM, Rockfield Real Estate.

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Area
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GFA.- 16,000 sqm.

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Location
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Landdrostdreef, Almere, NL.

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Photography
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Studioninedots was established in 2011 by Albert Herder, Vincent van der Klei, Arie van der Neut and Metin van Zijl as an architecture and urban design practice whose work extends from housing to urban concepts. Their practice excels in projects that transform complex urban sites, interweaving the built environment with the social fabric of a city. They are fascinated by the processes of (re)using or activating these sites; their dynamic contexts often demand unconventional solutions yet inspire new collective ways of living.

When facing urban challenges, they identify opportunities in circularity and, at the same time, embrace beauty and tactility as essential human needs. They team up: they adopt a collaborative approach that inspires, challenges and strengthens our work. Together with their clients and partners, they translate forward-thinking ideas and designs into a realistic framework, creating characteristic spaces that function as catalysts for meeting, exchange and connection.

Studioninedots is a multidisciplinary design practice with professionals working across architecture, interiors and urban planning. Studioninedots is based in Amsterdam, a city that inspires their with its open-mindedness, adaptability and creativity. With this in mind they initiated the Creative Workspace 1-1-1 in the former Stork factory building located along the Gedempt Hamerkanaal in Amsterdam’s north. It has an unfinished quality like its surroundings, thrives in its temporality, balances between rawness and comfort and has an element of unpredictability in its use: Studioninedots own WeSpace.
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