Ricola Storage Hall

Jürgen Adam, Katharina Hausmann, Frank Jüttner

Description

The Ricola company required a new building for the fully automated storage of herbal sweets. The 60 m long, 26 m wide and 17 m tall high-rack storage defined the size of the building. The hall was positioned close to the 10 m high precipice of an open quarry adjacent to the premises and forms a courtyard with the existing buildings.

Seen from a distance, the building appears as a unit. An annex for loading and unloading lorries is the only addition to the hall’s volume. As one gets closer, the façade reveals its load-bearing and charging components. Finger-shaped ribs are added to the vacuum concrete floor slab, which is cast directly onto the rocky ground. Horizontal and vertical Eternit panels are fixed to timber posts with brackets; the posts rest on the rib foundations. The panels function as a rain screen cladding and allow for the ventilation of the insulation behind. At roof parapet level, Eternit panels form a projecting cornice under which the metal structure of the high-rack storage is visible.

The architectural design of the façade takes up the theme of stacked timber boards in local sawmills, as well as the geological structure of the exposed layers of limestone of the yellow rock. The Eternit panels increase in size from the bottom towards the top, highlighting the difference between the lower building, where numerous single foundations support the façade structure, and the upper building, where a cantilevering timber structure reveals the metal high-rack storage inside the building. The layering of the Eternit panels also visualises the storage of the goods inside the building. Altogether, the reflection of the building’s function and its context in the construction of the façade system exemplifies the architects’ interpretation of the site.

Drawings

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Ground floor

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Floor plan diagram

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South elevation

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West elevation

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East elevation

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Detail section and elevation of south-east corner with emergency exit

Photos

View of the building envelope consisting of layered Eternit panels reminiscentof stacked timber boards

Structure and construction of the façade consisting of Eternit panels supported by brackets


Originally published in: Jürgen Adam, Katharina Hausmann, Frank Jüttner, Industrial Buildings: A Design Manual, Birkhäuser, 2004.

Building Type Industrial Buildings

Morphological Type Detached Building, Solitary Building

Urban Context Village/Town

Architect Herzog & de Meuron, Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron

Year 1987

Location Laufen

Country Switzerland

Geometric Organization Linear

Maximum Span 13 m

Exterior Dimensions 60 m x 26 m x 17 m

Storage Area 1,560 m²

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Column-and-Slab

Structural System Skeleton Structure

Access Type Courtyard Access

Layout Single Hall

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Program Depots & Storage

Consultants Special planning metal construction: A. Schmidlin
Special planning timber construction: G. Kämpf

Structural Consultant R. Schmidlin

Map Link to Map