After months of public anticipation, the Studioninedots team has unveiled its ambitious project to transform a 200-year-old factory in Groningen into an urban public space dedicated to innovation, culture, and community. Through a meticulous restoration of the original structures, the “Niemeyer” complex will house a multitude of uses open to both residents and visitors.

From cultural spaces, hospitality, education and manufacturing to public services such as cafes, galleries and workshops, the new programs will be integrated into the rehabilitated interior spaces of the former tobacco factory, along with carefully articulated new buildings.

"By opening up the 40,000 m² complex, we’re transforming a sealed industrial relic into a connected urban district, designed for innovation, culture and encounter."

Metin van Zijl, partner at Studioninedots.

Originally built in 1904 and strategically located near the city center, the complex, rehabilitated by Studioninedots, will seamlessly integrate into the daily life of Groningen. Through a series of spatial elements that highlight the site's rich industrial history, the design harmoniously incorporates the different layers that bear witness to the factory's evolution over the years.

"Along the buildings and functions winds the Green Route: a sequence of new stairs, bridges and walkways that traverse the blocks, linking street level to roofs and courtyards. These spatial objects turn the site into one walkable, multi-level spatial experience — where old and new uplift the other."

Karlijn de Jong, architect.

Building upon the solid historical foundation of the "Niemeyer" complex, a series of spatial interventions are designed to establish new relationships between users, programs, and the surrounding environment. Each proposed intervention reinforces the dialogue between past and present, between the building and the city, and between the interior space and the surrounding landscape.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.

Project description by Studioninedots

Opening The Gates
On a former factory site in Groningen, tobacco was processed behind brick walls and locked gates for over two centuries. Now, for the first time, this hidden industrial world will open up as ‘Niemeyer’ — a bold new public place in the heart of the city.

Niemeyer will bring together new ventures for digital innovation, cultural venues, hospitality, education and manufacturing — all set within the original factory buildings. Public functions such as cafés, galleries and workshops are housed both in the renovated interiors and in newly designed spaces, that connect seamlessly with streets and parks. Located near the station and city centre, the site becomes part of the city’s everyday flow, welcoming to both locals and visitors.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.
"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.

Retaining The Fabric
The Niemeyer complex tells its story through architecture: brick halls from 1904, raw concrete additions from later decades, and the marks left by former industrial use. Wherever possible, we carefully preserve and restore the original structures. Our design embraces these layers rather than smoothing them over — highlighting the site’s evolution through contrast and continuity.

To this historic bedrock, we add a series of spatial elements that utilise the site’s layered nature, while forging new connections between people, programs, and place. Every intervention strengthens the dialogue between old and new, building and city, interior and landscape.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.
"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.

New Urban Catalysts
We carried the concept of opening up the factory into the interior design throughout the site. As such, we turned the interior spaces, which were originally cluttered and dark, into bright and attractive places with a clear logic and routing, while ensuring the historical character of the original factory was preserved.

- Atop the repurposed ART building, the DAK ART rooftop terrace transforms the former industrial roofscape into a cultural space overlooking the Industriestraat.
- Across, the Burley Bar opens with a transparent facade that dissolves the boundary between interior and public realm. This activation of the ground floor breathes life into the adjacent urban park Spoorpark. Daylight filters deep into the space, while generous openings ensure that the bar feels as much a part of the park as to the building.

To bring a wide range of work functions to Niemeyer, we introduce the Shared Facilities: a series of flexible spaces designed to work, collaborate and exchange ideas. Most prominent are:

- The Lab Pavilion along Spoorpark unfolds as a flexible, modular environment for digital makers, startups, and knowledge institutions. Open by design, the pavilion’s structure accommodates rapid reconfiguration, ensuring it can evolve with the needs of its users.
- Hidden within the old courtyard in the factory’s oldest building, the Tabaksbos (Tobacco Forest) brings nature and daylight to the heart of the architecture. A distinctive platform structure, mature trees, native planting, and informal seating, turn this former production space into an inner world of calm and inspiration.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.
"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.

Open Space Plan
Four public zones define the open space: the Spoorpark, Industriestraat, Buurtstraat and Entreeplein. Together, they form the connective tissue between buildings, programs and surrounding neighbourhoods.

The Spoorpark follows the route of the historic rail line. Rails embedded in the pavement, rain gardens, and informal seating invite both play and pause. Industriestraat, once used for logistics, now hosts pavilions, outdoor seating, and public events — making it the new social artery of the site.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.
"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by SURREND3R.

Reclaimed, Restored, Renewed
The design draws directly from the site’s industrial DNA. Rough brick and steel window frames are maintained or reintroduced, structural skeletons are revealed.

Materials from dismantled structures are re-used in place: brick reclaimed from demolitions becomes paving, steel trusses reappear as pergolas, and concrete slabs become seating. The result is a layered environment where the site's history is not just referenced, yet physically present.

Green roofs on buildings like the Lab Pavillion help cool the environment and purify the air. Rainwater is collected through permeable surfaces and stored underground in buffers and wadis, supporting the landscape year-round.

An existing basement network is repurposed for bicycle parking and infrastructure, leaving the surface open to pedestrians and public life. Cycling routes connect directly to the nearby train station and urban fabric.

"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by Absent Matter.
"Niemeyer" by Studioninedots. Rendering by SURREND3R.

A Place That Grows From Use
From the start, residents, entrepreneurs and future users are involved through test spaces, temporary installations and public events. This helps to shape a place where work and culture, calm and activity, architecture and green spaces come together naturally. Niemeyer will continue to grow in the future through how people use it. Once a place of the past, the factory is becoming a new foundation for the city’s future.

Axonometric sequence. "Niemeyer" by Studioninedots.

Axonometric sequence. "Niemeyer" by Studioninedots.

More information

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Architects
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Studioninedots. Lead Architects.- Albert Herder, Vincent van der Klei, Arie van der Neut, Metin van Zijl.

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Project team
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Team Niemeyer.- Campus Groningen (programme), Municipality of Groningen, Studioninedots (urban transformation, architecture, Shared Facilities interior i.c.w. Ronald Hooft & Suzanna Weeda), Felixx (landscape architect), BERNS architectuur (heritage advisor), abtWassenaar (engineering, building physics), Geveke (contractor), Nijeboer-Hage (installations).
Design team Studioninedots.- Albert Herder, Vincent van der Klei, Metin van Zijl, Jurjen van der Horst, Karlijn de Jong, Dennis Roest, Gosia Machaj, Paulina Kurowska, Ania Bozek, Eva Souren, Nina Kwakkernaat, Stefanie Krietemeijer, Bas van Lenteren, Mohammed Tarek, Britt Segeren.

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Client
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MWPO, MWPO & Campus Groningen (Shared Facilities).

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Area
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38,000 sqm.

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Dates
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Design phase.- 2023-2025.
Provisional start of construction factory’s southern section.- From 2026.
Provisional start of construction factory’s northern section.- From 2027.

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Location
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Paterswoldseweg, Groningen, Netherlands.

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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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Published on: December 30, 2025
Cite:
metalocus, AGUSTINA BERTA
"From tobacco to tomorrow. "Niemeyer," public place for culture and innovation by Studioninedots" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/tobacco-tomorrow-niemeyer-public-place-culture-and-innovation-studioninedots> ISSN 1139-6415
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