The new residential development developed in the innovative and cosmopolitan “Makers District” of the city of Abu Dhabi, has been designed by the MVRDV architecture studio. Pixel is proposed as a mixed-use development that seeks a new approach different from the concept under which residential complexes are currently developed in the United Arab Emirates.

The project is inspired by the innovative and cosmopolitan strength of the district, to offer an approach based on the sense of belonging to a place and community spirit. The project promotes an outdoor lifestyle, so it uses different strategies that help cool the microclimate within the plaza and generate terraces, to create a comfortable outdoor environment.

The project developed by MVRDV has 525 apartments, shops, offices and services, oriented towards the square on which they seem to crumble, providing an identity that helps it stand out from other complexes in the Emirates. The complex has homes intended for different types of users, mixing more expensive units and more affordable spaces.

Modest architecture but striking materials give shape to the building, inviting users to visit the square and generating a striking identity for visitors. Inspired by the appearance of a pearl, each tower offers large windows and terraces facing the interior of the square, which are completed with tile screens in 14 different pastel colors, providing a unique identity to each one.

Pixel by MVRDV. Photograph by Jon Wallis.
Pixel by MVRDV. Photograph by Jon Wallis.
 

Project description by MVRDV

Pixel, the 85,000-square-metre mixed-use development designed by MVRDV in Abu Dhabi, is now complete. The complex features 525 apartments together with shops, offices, and amenities, taking an innovative approach to designing residential complexes in the Emirates. Central to this effort is the communal plaza at the heart of the development, where the seven towers “break down” into formations of terraces and bay windows, complete with shading screens of tiles in 14 subtle pastel colours inspired by the appearance of a pearl.

Pixel is the first project completed in Makers District, a new development on Abu Dhabi’s Reem Island that developer IMKAN bills as the new heart of Abu Dhabi – a creative counterpart to the city’s cultural hub on the nearby Saadiyat Island. The design capitalises on the innovative, cosmopolitan spirit of Makers District to offer an approach to living that is rare in the United Arab Emirates – with an emphasis on identity and a strong sense of place, an outdoor lifestyle, community spirit, and modest yet striking materials.

The development forms a central hub in Maker’s District, so the design’s seven compact towers are pushed to the edge of the site, their positions and heights optimised to provide shade, encourage cooling breezes, and create connections with both the waterfront developments that surround the site on three sides and the beach. Between the towers, a central plaza forms Pixel’s social centre, with restaurants, cafés, and shops soon to occupy the ground floor. Community functions – from a gym and medical clinic to an early learning centre and offices for innovative start-ups – will occupy the level above, ensuring that the buildings of Pixel are always active and that the plaza is therefore lively throughout the day.

Pixel by MVRDV. Photograph by Jon Wallis.
Pixel by MVRDV. Photograph by Jon Wallis.

The façades facing this plaza are what truly bring the project to life: At their bases, the towers crumble into “pixels”, spilling out into the plaza to create terraces and bay windows. These extend the living spaces inside into the public realm, encouraging residents to enjoy the outdoors in the cooler months of the year. Water and green features in the plaza below help to cool the microclimate within the plaza, making for a more comfortable environment outdoors, with planned green roofs being added to the top of the pixels. Life in the apartments above blends with the life in the plaza, giving a sense of place to the project, and an identity which helps it stand out from other complexes in the Emirates.

This identity is further reinforced by the materials used on the project that, despite a certain modesty, nonetheless grab the attention of passers-by. In a nod to Abu Dhabi’s heritage, the development is envisaged as an oyster, with a hard outer shell that sequesters a delicate pearl inside. The outer façades are made of concrete panels, imprinted with a graphic pattern designed by artist Nicole Martens that was inspired by oyster shells. Glimpsed between the towers, the shading screens of the central plaza, clad in tiles of 14 different pastel colours, give the impression of a pearl inside the shell. On the interior, this modest yet joyful approach to materials continues, with each tower adopting a colour profile that gives it a unique identity and helps to improve wayfinding from the car park below ground.

Pixel by MVRDV. Photograph by Jon Wallis.
Pixel by MVRDV. Photograph by Jon Wallis.

Pixel contains 525 apartments of varying sizes, ranging from studios to spacious three-bedroom homes. These apartments are arranged in a way that celebrates diversity, mixing more expensive units and more affordable spaces together. This is enabled by the pedestrian plaza which, with its vibrant atmosphere, offers a benefit to living on the lower levels and makes these apartments just as desirable as those nearer to the tops of the towers. As a result, the project encourages contact between people from different walks of life – expats and Abu Dhabi locals, large families and singles living alone, the young and the old.

“With Pixel, we challenged the residential typologies that have become the norm in the UAE. Instead of nondescript, isolated towers made palatable by a veneer of luxury finishes on the interior, Pixel makes it possible for residents to spend some time outdoors, become friends with their neighbours, to invite visitors for a meal in the restaurant in the plaza. It encourages a way of life that is not only enjoyable, but environmentally and socially more sustainable than the alternatives.”

Jacob van Rijs, MVRDV founding partner.

More information

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Architects
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MVRDV. Founding Partner in charge.- Jacob van Rijs. Director.- Stefan de Koning.

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Project team
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MVRDV Next.- Boudewijn Thomas.
Visualization.- Antonio Luca Coco, Paolo Mossa Idra, Costanza Cuccato, Davide Calabro, Pavlos Ventouris, Kirill Emelianov, Tomaso Maschietti, Massimiliano Marzoli, Giovanni Coni.
Strategy & Development.- Willeke Vester.
Edina Peli, Mariya Gyaurova, Mirco Facchinelli, Kristin Schaefer, Katarzyna Plonka, Ole Allin Egebaek, Ronald Hoogeveen, Katarzyna Nowak, Akshey Krishna Venkatesh, Kevin Loftus, Luca Vacchini, Karin Houwen, Guido Boeters, Meng Yang, Diana Sacco, Stavros Gargaretas, Afrodite Moustroufi.

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Collaborators
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Architect of Record.- Dewan Architects + Engineers with Intercon (interior design).
Engineering and Project Management.- Ramboll Middle East.
District Masterplan.- RNL.
Infrastructure.- Parsons.
Cost Control.- Turner & Townsend.
Landscape and public realm design.- Bjarke Ingels Group.
Landscape architect.- Verdaus.
Lighting.- Delta Lighting Design.
Wayfinding & Signage.- Dezigntechnic.
Vertical transportation.- Cooper Wilcock.
Security.- WSP, Consquare.
Artist (façade).- Nicole Martens.

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Client
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IMKAN.

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Area
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85,000 sqm.

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Dates
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Design.- 2017.
Completed.- 2024.

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Location
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Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.

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Photography
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MVRDV was founded in 1993 by Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The practice engages globally in providing solutions to contemporary architectural and urban issues. A highly collaborative, research-based design method involves clients, stakeholders and experts from a wide range of fields from early on in the creative process. The results are exemplary, outspoken projects, which enable our cities and landscapes to develop towards a better future.

The products of MVRDV’s unique approach to design vary, ranging from buildings of all types and sizes, to urban plans and visions, numerous publications, installations and exhibitions. Built projects include the Netherlands Pavilion for the World EXPO 2000 in Hannover; the Market Hall, a combination of housing and retail in Rotterdam; the Pushed Slab, a sustainable office building in Paris’ first eco-district; Flight Forum, an innovative business park in Eindhoven; the Silodam Housing complex in Amsterdam; the Matsudai Cultural Centre in Japan; the Unterföhring office campus near Munich; the Lloyd Hotel in Amsterdam; the Ypenburg housing and urban plan in The Hague; the Didden Village rooftop housing extension in Rotterdam; the music centre De Effenaar in Eindhoven; the Gyre boutique shopping center in Tokyo; a public library in Spijkenisse; an international bank headquarters in Oslo, Norway; and the iconic Mirador and Celosia housing in Madrid.

Current projects include a variety of housing projects in the Netherlands, France, China, India, and other countries; a community centre in Copenhagen and a cultural complex in Roskilde, Denmark, a public art depot in Rotterdam, the transformation of a mixed use building in central Paris, an office complex in Shanghai, and a commercial centre in Beijing, and the renovation of an office building in Hong Kong. MVRDV is also working on large scale urban masterplans in Bordeaux and Caen, France and the masterplan for an eco-city in Logroño, Spain. Larger scale visions for the future of greater Paris, greater Oslo, and the doubling in size of the Dutch new town Almere are also in development.

MVRDV first published a manifesto of its work and ideas in FARMAX (1998), followed by MetaCity/Datatown (1999), Costa Iberica (2000), Regionmaker (2002), 5 Minutes City (2003), KM3 (2005), Spacefighter (2007) and Skycar City (2007), and more recently The Vertical Village (with The Why Factory, 2012) and the firm’s first monograph of built works MVRDV Buildings (2013). MVRDV deals with issues ranging from global sustainability in large scale studies such as Pig City, to small, pragmatic architectural solutions for devastated areas such as New Orleans.

The work of MVRDV is exhibited and published worldwide and has received numerous international awards. One hundred architects, designers and urbanists develop projects in a multi-disciplinary, collaborative design process which involves rigorous technical and creative investigation. MVRDV works with BIM and has official in-house BREEAM and LEED assessors.

Together with Delft University of Technology, MVRDV runs The Why Factory, an independent think tank and research institute providing an agenda for architecture and urbanism by envisioning the city of the future.

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Published on: July 19, 2024
Cite: "A new community identity. Pixel by MVRDV" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/new-community-identity-pixel-mvrdv> ISSN 1139-6415
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