Building D(emountable) is a sustainable and fully demountable structure on the site of a historic, monumental building complex in the center of Dutch city Delft, Netherlands.

The site is owned by cepezed, and the project is its own headquarters, developing its own architectural principles and criteria.
cepezed acquired the complex with former laboratories from Delft University of Technology in 2012. It transformed the monumental buildings into a creative cluster with housing for various companies in the creative sector, including the office itself.

Yet , the only non-monumental building on the site was in poor condition, and has been the site of Building D(emountable). Again, this is a full-blown own development of cepezed and again it is intended for companies in the knowledge-intensive creative industry. It houses a the app and website developer 9to5 software and a game developer Triumph Studios.

Building D(emountable)  measures 11 by 21.5 meters and has four floors of about 200 square meters of lettable floor area each. In addition to being demountable and remountable, the structure is also super lightweight: the use of materials is kept to an absolute minimum.

The building is also completely flexible in its arrangement, has no gas connection and is equipped with heat recovery. The ground floor is made of poured concrete, but otherwise all building components are modular and dry mounted. Supreme simplicity has been an important principle in the design.
 

Project description by cepezed

Building D(emountable) is a modern, sustainable and fully demountable structure on the site of a historic, monumental building complex in the center of Dutch city Delft. This site is owned by cepezed, an agency with expertise in the development, the design and the realization of buildings.

Creative cluster

cepezed acquired the complex with former laboratories from Delft University of Technology in 2012. It transformed the monumental buildings into a creative cluster with housing for various companies in the creative sector, including the office itself. However, the only non-monumental building on the site was in poor condition. It has  now made way for the new construction of Building D(emountable). Again, this is a full-blown own development of cepezed and again it is intended for companies in the knowledge-intensive creative industry. It houses a the app and website developer 9to5 software and a game developer Triumph Studios.

Circular prototype

The Netherlands has set itself the goal of rendering all construction activities fully circular by 2050, while cepezed has a long reputation for modular and demountable design and construction. Moreover, director Menno Rubbens of developer cepezedprojects is part of the national program committee to achieve the national circularity goals. Partly for those reasons, Building D(emountable) also had to become an example project on cepezed’s own grounds. Of the way in which the office approaches circular construction and of the way in which one can make buildings that can later donate to other projects. Or even be reused elsewhere in their entirety.

Lightweight, flexible and gas-free

Building D(emountable) has exactly the same footprint as the existing building that was no longer good and was demolished. It measures 11 by 21.5 meters and has four floors of about 200 square meters of lettable floor area each. In addition to being demountable and remountable, the structure is also super lightweight: the use of materials is kept to an absolute minimum. The building is also completely flexible in its arrangement, has no gas connection and is equipped with heat recovery. The ground floor is made of poured concrete, but otherwise all building components are modular and dry mounted. Supreme simplicity has been an important principle in the design.

Steel, wood and glass

Building part D(emountable) consists of a rationally optimized building kit with a steel, prefabricated and extremely slender main supporting structure. The structural floors and roof are made of lightweight wooden Laminated Veneer Lumber (LVL) elements that are also prefabricated. These have a compact height and the installations are integrated in them. The ribs of the LVL elements remain fully visible and are part of the building’s aesthetics. The screed is biobased and consists of gravel-like granules in a cardboard honeycomb structure with gypsum fiber boards on top. The entire screed is dry and easily removable again. The PVC finishing floor is made of partly recycled PVC. The building has no window frames: the double-layer insulating glass is mounted directly on the steel structure. For that reason, the steel construction is provided with welded screw profiles. The steel builder had to comply with the very limited tolerances of the façade builder, which was no small task. The façade is largely transparent, which makes for strong sight lines and relations between the inner and outer world. Vertical slat strips can be opened for natural ventilation. The down-to-earth, modern building strikingly and interestingly contrasts with the historic existing buildings. This also renders it illustrative for the way cepezed approaches the combination of new and historic construction.

Climate

The entire building functions as one large fire compartment. As a result, little material was required for fire-resistant measures; only the stairwell has a fire-resistant partition. All climate control works on air. On each floor, air conditioners that also take care of heating are integrated in the ceiling. In addition, the building is equipped with a heat exchanger. Roller blinds provide sun and light protection.

Integral process

Construction took place in an extremely short period of just over half a year. With the positioning of the elevator shaft, the building even topped out in an hour after the works started. The complete structure of steel skeleton and wooden floors was put together in three weeks. This was possible, among other things, because of an integrated process with thoughtful preparation and close, integrated cooperation between the various cepezed disciplines; from the project developers to the architecture and interior designers and of course the implementation coordinators. With short communication lines, all specialists are housed under one roof, which has not only improved the efficiency of the process, but also the level of coordination and thus the quality. cepezedprojects developed, cepezed and cepezed interior designed and cepezedbouwteam coordinated the construction. There was a close collaboration between the designers and the construction coordinator throughout the complete process, with key figures from the design also being part of the implementation team.

The cooperation with the external partners is also worth mentioning. With a lot of these, cepezed also often collaborates on other projects. As a result, all parties were already well attuned to each other. For example, the structural advice was provided by IMd and the advice in the fields of installations, building physics and fire safety was provided by Nelissen. The realization was tendered out to various parties such as Voortman, Metsä Wood, iFS, Kuijpers and Qbiq + Schelp Bouw & Interieur for respectively the steel construction, floors, facades, MEP/HAVAC and the fit-up package. This pragmatic approach meant that the implementing parties only had to concentrate on their own expertise. In terms of time, use of materials and financially, this has resulted in a high degree of efficiency.

Example at home

With circular projects such as the Temporary Courthouse in Amsterdam and restaurant The Green House in Utrecht, cepezed previously realized other projects completely designed for circularity. These garnered a lot of publicity and various prizes, such as the Amsterdam Architecture Prize and the public award of the Sustainable Building Awards. With Building Part D (removable), cepezed now has a circular example of its own manufacture directly at home. Customers and partners only have to look out the window to see how cepezed shapes circularity.

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Architects
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Project Team
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Interior design. -cepezedinterieur, Delft. Construction coordination
cepezedbouwteam, Delft
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Collaborators
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Structural engineering.- IMd Raadgevende Ingenieurs, Rotterdam. Consultant mechanical & electrical engineering, consultant building physics, sustainability, acoustics and fire safety.- Nelissen ingenieursbureau, Eindhoven.
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Client
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Jan Pesman
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Developer
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cepezedprojects, Delft
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Builder company
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Contractor steel construction.- Voortman Steel Construction, Rijssen. contractor electrical and mechanical installations.- Kuijpers Utiliteit Midden-Noord B.V, De Meern. Wood floring.- Metsä Wood / De Groot Vroomshoop. Contractor glass façades.- iFS Building Systems, Waddinxveen. Contractor roof.- Roof Protection, Arkel. Stairs.- EeStairs, Barneveld. Contractor ceilings and custom interior walls.- Schelp Bouw & Interieur, Eersel. Wall systems.- Qbiq, Alphen aan de Rijn. Pantries.- AS Projectinrichters, Poeldijk.
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Area
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Building area / plot area.- 968 m². Gfa / 242 m².
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Dates
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September 2016 – December 2019.
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Location
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Nieuwelaan 72 , Delft, Netherlands
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Fotografía
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Lucas van der Wee / cepezed
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cepezed is a Dutch Architects firm, with headquarters in Delft, Netherlands. Cepezed is a architecture office with a of projects both in and outside its home country The Netherlands.

Assignments address high-profile and sustainable projects such as the revitalization of State Office De Knoop, the circular catering pavilion The Green House, the dismountable Temporary Courthouse in Amsterdam and the new pier at Schiphol Airport, but also e.g. state-of-the-art laboratories, infrastructure and ingenious educational buildings. Cepezed uses an integral design method in which building components often fulfil various functions at the same time.

This way, the agency forges various aspects such as spatial design, construction and installation techniques into an indivisible whole. Cepezed has a lot of in-house knowledge: there are internal specialists for every design part and the office has separate departments and sister companies for interior design, property development and construction management. With a constant focus on buildable and high-quality architecture, the various branches collaborate closely and transparently.

Jan Pesman (Utrecht, 1951) studied architecture at the Technical University in Delft and was one of the founders of cepezed in 1973. In 1971 he was co-initiator of the Utopia scientific entertainment magazine, to which he remained connected as editor and designer until 1977. Pesman was also a co-initiator of the still existing magazine for design Items. From 1983 to 1992 he was a member of the editorial board. Jan Pesman was a senior lecturer at the Academy of Architecture in Rotterdam during the 1994-1995 academic year. In the period 2010-2014, he was chairman of the Construction Department of the Royal Institute of Engineers KIVI NIRIA. In 2018, he was named Delft Entrepreneur of the Year by the professional jury of the Delft Verbindt business platform. In addition to his many activities as an architect and spatial designer, he gives lectures at home and abroad.

Ronald Schleurholts (Roden, 1972) studied architecture at the Technical University in Delft, where he focused on architecture, building methodology and interior design. During his studies he worked for some time at the architectural firms Claus & Kaan and Koen van Velsen. He has been working at cepezed since 1999, where he joined at the beginning of 2005 as a partner and member of the board. In 2009, the European Center for Architecture, Art, Design and Urban Studies and the Chicago Atheneum voted Schleurholts as one of the forty most influential emerging European architects aged under forty. Between 2010 and 2015 he was a board member of the Association of Dutch Architects (BNA) and between 2011 and 2015 chairman of the Living Daylights Foundation. In 2019, he was selected for the ABN AMRO Sustainable 50, an annual inventory of leaders in sustainability within the Dutch construction and real estate sector. He also gives lectures at home and abroad about sustainable and integral design.

Paddy Sieuwerts (The Hague, 1977) studied architecture at the Rotterdam Institute for Architecture Architecture Civil Engineering & Urbanism and architecture at Delft University of Technology. Since his graduation in 2003, he has worked at various architectural firms, including cepezed and Atelier Kempe Thill in Rotterdam. He also worked at a series of industrially designed distribution centers at cepezed's sister company Bouwteam. In 2004 he definitively rejoined cepezed and developed, among other things, into a specialist in the field of estimates, forms of cooperation, contracts and large-scale non-residential construction, including (lab) buildings for scientific research. Sieuwerts was also part of cepezed's management team for many years. In 2015 he became a partner within the agency. He has been a member of the BNA Council of Members since the beginning of 2019.
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Published on: April 1, 2020
Cite: "Building D(emountable), a sustainable and fully demountable structure by cepezed" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/building-demountable-a-sustainable-and-fully-demountable-structure-cepezed> ISSN 1139-6415
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