Housing Complex in Waldburgstraße

Klaus-Peter Gast

Description

The southern slope in the little town of Nüziders had been overdeveloped with apartment blocks, but acquired a new accent in the form of this compact complex of owner-occupied dwellings. Austere, uncompromising and at first glance rejecting the scale of the neighbouring blocks, the main building is staggered by following the slope. A second, much smaller building stands diagonally to it, parallel with the plot boundary. Thus bar and block create the tension of an urban double structure. The two buildings are so loosely arranged as to take up the character of a scattered village, but they still create an unambiguous place. The long linear quality of the dominating figure creates a sense of boundary with the outside, and its interplay with the smaller block forms a courtyard in the rear space.

This is where the principal access point is placed: glazed staircases, attached to the building and following the stagger pattern, lead into two dwellings per floor. Hence the units are divided very clearly into an ancillary space zone and a main zone, whose orientation is undoubtedly justified by the impressive Alpine panorama. It is striking that there are no walls as such in this south-facing band of spaces: the architects use closets as full-length room dividers. The scenery to the south can be experienced along the whole length of the bar, and is further enhanced by conservatories. As completely glazed ‘showcases’ they provide articulating elements in the plain perforated façade, and at the same time presentation spaces for the mountain chains on the horizon.

Here architects Baumschlager und Eberle succeed in doing two things above all, in combination with the staggered effect: firstly, intelligible division into units, which are then linked back to the scale of the surroundings in this miraculous fashion; then they also create significance, because this is what makes the buildings recognizable and memorable. This is additionally aided by the unusual combination of timber shingles from the Alpine region as façade material in combination with classically modern steel and glass. One outstanding element in this complex is the effect that despite the typological category of high-density housing as a coherent volume on a large scale, here the occupants are given the impression that they are living in their own ‘house’. The way units are added to the whole still makes it possible to create individual identity. Thus a way of living that had the potential to end up as an anonymous stack led to a new form of an individual terraced home of one’s own.

Drawings

This browser does not support PDFs.Figure-ground plan

This browser does not support PDFs.Site plan

This browser does not support PDFs.Axonometric diagram of the building mass in staggered units

This browser does not support PDFs.Second floor with external staircase and south-facing living rooms

This browser does not support PDFs.With south-facing living rooms and their conservatories

This browser does not support PDFs.Longitudinal section

Photos

Exterior view from the north

Exterior view from the south side


Originally published in: Klaus-Peter Gast, Living Plans: New Concepts for Advanced Housing, Birkhäuser, 2005.

Building Type Housing

Morphological Type Complex/Ensemble, Stepped Building

Urban Context Village/Town

Architect Baumschlager & Eberle, Carlo Baumschlager, Dietmar Eberle

Year 1996

Location Nüziders

Country Austria

Geometric Organization Linear

Useable Floor Area 1312 m²

Number of Units 15

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels), Mid-Rise (4 to 7 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Solid Construction

Access Type Courtyard Access

Layout Corridor/Hallway, Flexible Plan, Zoning

Outdoor Space of Apartment Roof Terrace, Winter Garden/Glazed Loggia

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Additional Information Apartments in a suburban, hilly housing estate area
Masonry construction with timber shingles as façade cladding

Map Link to Map