The Arch

The Arc at Green School

Unique

The geometry of this arch not only saves a lot of building material, it also results in a beautiful sports hall.

The Arc aims to set new standards for sustainable building and education.

The Arc is the newest buil­ding on campus at the world-renowned Green School in Bali, Indo­nesia. The school has a 12 year history of brea­king boun­da­ries and expan­ding hori­zons.

The Arc is the newest bench­mark in that history, raising the bar for sustainable educa­tion around the world. The first buil­ding of its kind ever made.

Along the way, The Arc is a fanta­stic and distinctly multi­func­tional sports hall.

The Arc at Green School is built from a series of inter­sec­ting 14 meter tall bamboo arches span­ning 19 meters, inter­con­nected by anti­c­la­stic grids­hells which derive their strength from curving in two oppo­site direc­tions.

The design model was a mammal’s chest.

The Arc is a feat of engi­nee­ring; it required months of rese­arch and deve­lo­p­ment and fine tuning of tailor-made details. The result is a refined design with unpar­al­leled beauty.

The Arc employs one of nature’s grea­test stra­te­gies for crea­ting large spaces with minimal struc­ture. Within a human ribcage, a series of ribs working in compres­sion are held in place by a tensioned flexible layer of muscle and skin.

This creates a thin but strong enca­se­ment for the lungs. In the case of The Arc, arches working in compres­sion are held in place by tensioned anti­c­la­stic grids­hells.

The Arc’s counterintuitive orchestration of geometry brings the structure into a state of equilibrium.

These fields of grids­hells appear to drape across the spaces between impos­sibly thin arches soaring over­head, giving a whimsy, inti­macy and beauty to the space. Although, the grids­hells appear to hang from the arches, they actually hold them up.

“The grids­hells use shape stiff­ness to form the roof enclo­sure and provide buck­ling resis­tance to the para­bolic arches. The two systems toge­ther create an unique and highly efficient struc­ture, able to flex under load allo­wing the struc­ture to redis­tri­bute weight, easing loca­lised forces on the arches.” says Neil Thomas from Atelier One.

The Arc’s coun­ter­in­tui­tive orchestra­tion of geometry brings the struc­ture into a state of equi­li­brium, which means a drama­ti­cally decreased neces­sity for struc­tural mate­rial. This also means an unpre­ce­dented inner volume with an impos­sibly thin struc­ture and without any distrac­ting trusses.

We did this.

Project data

Architects

IBUKU

Client

Grren School Bali

Address

Green School Bali
Jalan Raya Sibang Kaja
Banjar Saren
Abian­semal, Badung
IDN  ‑Bali 80352

Opening

2020

Photos

IBUKU

Author

IBUKU

Videos

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

aquanale & FSB 2021

aquanale and FSB

Re-Start

Spanning in total around 65,000 m² of exhibition space, FSB and aquanale, turn the fair grounds in Cologne into the “place to be”.

FSB will take place from 26 to 29 October 2021 in co-location with aquanale.

FSB, the Inter­na­tional Trade Fair for Public Space, Sports and Leisure Faci­li­ties, which kicks off in Cologne in less than eight weeks, is all set to go. The leading inter­na­tional trade fair for the industry will play a key role in successfully relaun­ching the market and is a must for anyone wanting to achieve success in the play, sports, public space and leisure sectors.

Only here do all industry players get a compre­hen­sive over­view of what’s new: the latest tech­no­lo­gies, product inno­va­tions, process opti­mi­sa­tions and visio­nary plan­ning. The #B‑Safe4Business hygiene concept and the new 3‑G concept, CH3CK, which requires all atten­dees to be fully vacci­nated, or have reco­vered from an infec­tion within the last six months (but at least 28 days ago), or test nega­tive for Covid, will ensure that all parti­ci­pants are comple­tely safe.

Around 270 compa­nies from 35 count­ries will be exhi­bi­ting at FSB, which this year will cover appro­xi­m­ately 37,000 sqm in Halls 9 and 10.1 of the Cologne trade fair grounds. More than 70 per cent of the exhi­bi­tors are from abroad. The stron­gest inter­na­tional presences come from France, the Nether­lands, Belgium, Poland, Italy, Spain, the USA, Turkey and the Scan­di­na­vian count­ries. The exhi­bi­ting compa­nies cover ever­y­thing rela­ting to public spaces, play­ground equip­ment, outdoor fitness, ice sports, sports equip­ment, sports floo­ring and stadium infra­struc­ture.      

Around 180 companies from 25 countries will be exhibiting at aquanale.

Around 180 compa­nies from 25 count­ries will be exhi­bi­ting at aqua­nale, which this year will cover appro­xi­m­ately 24,000 sqm. 58 per cent of the exhi­bi­tors are from abroad.

Around 180 compa­nies from 25 count­ries will be exhi­bi­ting at aqua­nale, which this year will cover appro­xi­m­ately 24,000 sqm. 58 per cent of the exhi­bi­tors are from abroad.

This is where German and inter­na­tional trade fair visi­tors from specia­lised pool cons­truc­tion compa­nies, local autho­ri­ties, water parks, archi­tect’s and plan­ning offices, hotels, day spas, gyms, sani­tary, heating and air-condi­tio­ning compa­nies as well as premium private visi­tors can inform them­selves. 

Spanning in total around 65,000 m² of exhibition space, FSB and aquanale, turn the fair grounds in Cologne into the “place to be”.

Span­ning in total around 65,000 square metres of exhi­bi­tion space, both events, FSB and aqua­nale, turn the fair grounds in Cologne into the most important loca­tion for amenity area plan­ning and design, the archi­tec­ture and manage­ment of sports faci­li­ties, play­grounds, sports equip­ment, exer­cise areas, recrea­tional faci­li­ties, as well as the public and private pool sectors.

With IAKS, the Inter­na­tional Asso­cia­tion for Sports and Leisure Faci­li­ties, as its concep­tual partner, and with FIFA, the Synthetic Turf Council (STC) and its EMEA branch (ESTC), the German Olympic Sports Confe­de­ra­tion (DOSB), the Federal Asso­cia­tion of Play­ground Equip­ment and Leisure Faci­li­ties Manu­fac­tu­rers (BSFH), STADTund­RAUM and the Sport­netz­werk @FSB network also on board, FSB enjoys the backing of many asso­cia­tions and coope­ra­tion part­ners, all of whom have plenty to offer both in terms of sports and addi­tional content matter over nume­rous dedi­cated exhi­bi­tion areas. The world-renowned IAKS Congress, along with further congresses and specia­lised events under­line the signi­fi­cance of FSB as the leading inter­na­tional trade fair for the industry. 

FSB

The main programme theme for the IAKS Congress 2021 is “Developing healthy and sustainable communities”.

The IAKS Congress will be taking place as part of FSB for the 27th time this year. The main programme theme for the IAKS Congress 2021 is “Deve­lo­ping healthy and sustainable commu­ni­ties”, provi­ding an oppor­tu­nity to explore how local autho­ri­ties can create the right condi­tions for healthy and sustainable life­styles for citi­zens. Congress sessions will focus on issues like “Climate change and envi­ron­mental sustaina­bi­lity”, opera­tional solu­tions (“Digi­ta­li­sa­tion and future trends”), and the social sustaina­bi­lity of sports and leisure faci­li­ties.

In addi­tion, IOC, IPC and IAKS will once again confer the coveted inter­na­tional archi­tec­ture prizes in 2021. The awards draw the public’s atten­tion to exem­plary buil­dings and faci­li­ties that succeed in brin­ging the factors sustaina­bi­lity and legacy, clear func­tion­a­lity and excep­tional archi­tec­ture into harmony with each other. 86 teams of opera­tors and archi­tects from 25 count­ries are vying for the awards this year. Further­more, the IOC IPC IAKS Archi­tec­ture and Design Award for Students and Young Profes­sio­nals invites young archi­tects, land­scape archi­tects and desi­gners to conceive inven­tive spaces and surfaces for an active life­style. 44 students and career entrants from 12 count­ries have submitted their design concepts here.

We did this.

More information

FSB

nter­na­tional Trade Fair for Public Space, Sports and Leisure Faci­li­ties

Address

Koeln­messe
Messe­platz 1
D — 50679 Köln

aquanale

Inter­na­tional Trade Fair for Sauna.Pool.Ambience

Opening

26.10.2021

Photos

Koeln­messe

Author

Koeln­messe
(Adver­to­rial)

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Kaufland sports roof

Kaufland sports roof

The active roof

The activation of roof surfaces in times of declining resources is one of the great challenges of our time.

The often neglected “fifth façade” offers huge potential for accommodating sports facilities, playgrounds or day care centres.

The Kauf­land sports roof is a wonderful example of the sustainable acti­va­tion of roof space in urban areas. The often negle­cted “fifth façade” offers huge poten­tial for accom­mo­da­ting sports faci­li­ties, play­grounds or day care centres in an urban envi­ron­ment and in a manner that saves both space and resources.

Sport­be­trieb Erfurt, the Kauf­land super­market and REGUPOL are among the pioneers of the move­ment.

Our cities are beco­ming incre­asingly crowded. More and more people are moving closer toge­ther in incre­asingly limited spaces. Even provi­ding loca­tions for such essen­tials such as food, retailing and sports is beco­ming diffi­cult.

Roof­tops offer a vast, and to-date, rarely explored poten­tial for a wide range of uses. They are frequently seen as no more than places for instal­ling air condi­tio­ners or antennas — things that nobody really wants to see or attract atten­tion to.

This is a lost oppor­tu­nity because these roofs can have many highly attrac­tive uses.

The Kaufland sports roof is a fully equipped type C athletics facility — and one of the best-visited sports facilities in the entire city due to its spectacular location and views.

The city of Erfurt took a new approach as early as 1994. The steadily expan­ding resi­den­tial real estate “Kleiner Herren­berg” in the south-east of the Thurin­gian state capital suffered from an urgent lack of both shop­ping and sports faci­li­ties.

During the initial plan­ning phase for the new food retail store, the idea of putting sports on the roof and shop­ping under­neath began to take shape.

And this is how the Kauf­land sports roof came into being.

The Kauf­land sports roof has a large arti­fi­cial turf playing field (73 x 110 metres), a four-lane, 400-metre running track with six straight sprint lanes, long jump, high jump and triple jump faci­li­ties, as well as two volley­ball courts.

It also includes a spec­tator stand with swee­ping views over the whole city and a buil­ding to house chan­ging rooms for athletes, judges, teachers and coaches as well as equip­ment rooms.

The Kauf­land sports roof is thus a fully equipped type C athle­tics faci­lity — and its spec­ta­cular loca­tion and view makes it one of the most frequented sports faci­li­ties in the entire city.

The renovation of the athletics surfaces was carried out in a sustainable and resource-saving manner — without removing and disposing of the old surface.

The arti­fi­cial turf pitch was reno­vated from the ground up in 2012, with the running track and other athle­tics faci­li­ties follo­wing suit in 2020. REGUPOL, a long-stan­ding sponsor and promoter of sport in Erfurt, was respon­sible for this second stage.

For reno­vating the athle­tics surfaces, a sustainable and resource-saving approach was taken: after clea­ning each synthetic surface thoroughly, a new wear layer was applied on top without having to remove and dispose of the old surface beneath. This process is called re-topping and is one of REGU­POL’s many strengths.

REGUPOL had previously equipped Erfurt’s two largest sports faci­li­ties, the Stei­ger­wald Stadium and the Hartwig-Gauder Hall and is also a sponsor of “Top Team Thüringen”, a local sports team.

All of Thurin­gia’s top athletes should be able to train and compete under one roof.

Just as important is the promo­tion of young talent: young athletes should stay in Thuringia and not change. The top sprinter Julian Wagner and his coach Tobias Schneider are ambassa­dors of this alli­ance.

Cooperation between Erfurt sports clubs, Kaufland and REGUPOL has ensured a lasting and sustainable supply of sports activities for the Kaufland sports roof.

The newly reno­vated Kauf­land sports roof is a prime example of the symbiotic use of densi­fied spaces in urban capi­tals. While Kauf­land provides the local area with basic needs in food supplies, the sports ground covers the need for sporting acti­vi­ties — close to home, sustainable and extre­mely space-saving.

Coope­ra­tion between Erfurt sports clubs, Kauf­land and REGUPOL has ensured a lasting and sustainable supply of sports acti­vi­ties for the Kauf­land sports roof.

Acti­vating roof space in times of incre­asingly scarce resources is one of the great chal­lenges of our time. However, it is not only about desig­ning roof areas appro­pria­tely, but also about ensu­ring conflict-free use of a building’s various levels. Here, sound insu­la­tion in parti­cular plays a major role, which is also one of REGU­POL’s core compe­tences.

Our aware­ness of social issues, the enormous expe­ri­ence gained from instal­ling sports surfaces in well over 100 count­ries and our vast exper­tise with a wide variety of acou­stic chal­lenges are what moti­vate us to take on more projects of this kind. Both on the roof and below it.

We did this.

Project data

Leichtathletik

REGUPOL BSW GmbH
Am Hilgen­acker 24
D — 57319 Bad Berle­burg

Client

Erfurter Sport­be­trieb
Landes­haupt­stadt Erfurt
Fried­rich-Ebert-Straße 60
D — 99096 Erfurt

Address

Sport­dach Kauf­land
Stie­ler­straße 9
D — 99099 Erfurt

Opening

2020

Photograph

Tom Bauer 
Beet­ho­ven­straße 5d
D — 97080 Würz­burg

Author

Johannes Bühl­be­cker
More Sports Media

Video

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Nou Camp Nou

Nou Camp Nou

Green Day(s)

Nou Camp Nou connects neighbourhoods and districts, produces 15,000 kg of oxygen and absorbs 25,000 kg of CO2. And all that every day.

The city of Barcelona offers its residents just 6 m² of green space per capita. That is not enough.

Barce­lona curr­ently has just more than 6m² of green areas per inha­bi­tant. Accor­ding to the WHO (World Health Orga­niza­tion), cities should have a minimum of 9m².

The ON‑A proposal for the Nou Camp Nou (Nou Parc), a forest that would cover the Camp Nou in Barce­lona, ​​aims to turn the area into a great green lung using bioar­chi­tec­ture as a stra­tegy for rena­tu­ra­tion.

Accor­ding to the ON‑A philo­sophy, the rena­tu­ra­tion of cities and the crea­tion of quality spaces for its citi­zens is not just an inte­res­ting idea, but a need.

Nou Camp Nou aims to show how nature can return to cities without absor­bing addi­tional space.

Currently, the area around the Estadio Camp Nou is largely sealed. It only has 8% of green areas.

The Nou Camp Nou project shows how nature would come back to cities without losing buildable space, raising the topo­graphy and crea­ting a blanket of green forest above the stadium and its faci­li­ties, which would remain below the surface of the new park.

Curr­ently this area is a closed concrete space and only 8% of green areas. Conse­quently, an “island” effect is gene­rated, sepa­ra­ting the neigh­bor­hoods of Les Corts and Zona Univer­si­taria.

cc

The space is huge and is in disuse most of the time, except during sport events or private visits to its faci­li­ties. Neigh­bors often expe­ri­ence collapse when the space comes into opera­tion during major events.

The space is huge and is in disuse most of the time, except during sport events or private visits to its faci­li­ties. Neigh­bors often expe­ri­ence collapse when the space comes into opera­tion during major events.

Nou Camp Nou turns the journey to FC Barcelona matches into a spectacular experience. On all other days, this project is just a great park.

The conver­sion of this area would provide a great oppor­tu­nity for the city of Barce­lona, ​​which would gain a new green space capable of connec­ting neigh­bor­hoods while produ­cing 15,000kg oxygen/day and absorb 25,000kg of C02/day.

Inside Nou Parc Nou you could walk or run along a 2.4km route, stretch in green areas and picnic in reserved areas, in addi­tion to enjoy a 360º pano­r­amic view at the highest point of the park, which culmi­nates around the stadium.

The two lakes would help to cool the tempe­ra­ture and help the deve­lo­p­ment and main­ten­ance of the area, as well as being natural coll­ec­tors of rain­water, which could be reused for the irri­ga­tion and main­ten­ance of the park.

This project helps to create a new permea­bi­lity that would allow the connec­tion between the two neigh­bor­hoods of Les Corts and the Univer­sity Area, apart from giving more value to their neigh­bors and to the city of Barce­lona itself without affect mobi­lity and current logi­stics.

Nou Camp Nou turns the journey to FC Barce­lona matches into a spec­ta­cular expe­ri­ence. On all other days, this project is just a great park.

We did this.

Project data

Architects

ON‑A
C/ Doctor Rizal, 8, local 1
ESP — 08006 Barce­lona

Team

Jordi Fernández, Eduardo Gutiérrez
Luciana Teodózio, Geor­gina Morales, Saul Ajuría, Ernest Ruiz, Javier Bernal, Claudia Anto­nacci, Natalia Cambello

Author

ON‑A

Address

Camp Nou
C. d’Arís­tides Maillol, 12
ESP-08028 Barce­lona

Video

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Arc en Ciel

Arc en Ciel in Saint-Josse-ten-Noode

One more

How a small school in densely populated Brussels creates space for itself — especially on the roof.

Label Architecture expanded “Arc en Ciel” with four classrooms and new outdoor areas. The roof areas played a special role in this.

Located in the midst of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode — the neigh­bor­hood with the highest popu­la­tion density in Belgium — the already crowded school and daycare centre “Arc en Ciel” wanted to increase its capa­city with extra class­rooms along with new outdoor spaces.

The internal orga­ni­sa­tion allows  to gather an ensemble of smaller func­tions and to turn them into two big class­rooms on each floor. Further­more, the dupli­ca­tion of the exis­ting facade creates a new circu­la­tion, avoids an enfi­lade of classes and provides extra storage space for the pupils.

The existing gap between the buildings was closed by adding a storey with new classrooms.

Moreover, the new facade drasti­cally improves the overall thermal perfor­mance of the buil­ding.

These same tactics are applied to provide more outdoor space for the school. By inser­ting a concrete struc­ture, the ground surface of the play­ground is doubled.

This “table” covers a coll­ec­tion of play­ground equip­ment on the ground floor, while its roof is used as an enclosed sports field.

Arc en Ciel now has some exceptional qualities to offer. Above all, the two large outdoor areas are a clear response to a dense environment.

On the corner, the cavity between the two buil­dings is filled with the addi­tion of 4 new class­rooms. The exis­ting stair­case is extended to giving access to the new level and its roof­sur­face.

Here, accom­pa­g­nied by an impres­sive view on Brussels, the daycare centre finds its new outdoor space and pres­ents itself to the neigh­bor­hood.

We did this.

Project data

Architects

Label Archi­tec­ture
Rue de Flandre 121
BEL — 1000 Brussels

Client

Muni­ci­pa­lity of Saint-Josse-ten-Noode

Construction

JZH & Part­ners

Address

Arc en Ciel
Rue de l’Abond­ance 17
BEL — 1210 Saint-Josse-ten-Noode

Opening

2019

Photograph

Stijn Bollaert

Author

Label Archi­tec­ture

Video

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Little Island

Little Island on the Hudson River

Water Park

Little Island is a new public park in New York held above water by sculptural planters.

The planners were originally invited to design a pavilion for a new pier in southwest Manhattan.

Little Island is a new public park in New York that shel­ters three new perfor­mance venues on the Hudson River. Desi­gned as a haven for people and wild­life, it is a green oasis, held above the water by sculp­tural plan­ters, and located just a short walk across a gang­plank from Manhattan’s Lower West Side.

Heather­wick Studio was initi­ally invited by phil­an­thro­pist Barry Diller and the Hudson River Park Trust to create a pavi­lion for a new pier off the south-west of Manhattan. Instead of desig­ning a deco­ra­tive object to sit in the Hudson River Park, the design team saw an oppor­tu­nity to rethink what a pier could be.

It’s about the excitement of being above the water and the feeling of leaving the city behind and dipping into the green.

The starting point was not the struc­ture, but the expe­ri­ence for visi­tors: the exci­te­ment of being over the water, the feeling of leaving the city behind and being immersed in gree­nery – inspired by Central Park, where it’s possible to forget that you are in the midst of the most densely popu­lated city in the United States.

Piers were tradi­tio­nally flat to allow boats to dock, but did they have to be? In contrast to the flat streets of Manhattan, the design team wanted to create a new topo­graphy for the city, which could rise up to shape a variety of spaces.

The idea of raising the park on its foun­da­tions came from the exis­ting wooden piles in the water, remnants of the many piers that used to extend from the shore­line of Manhattan. Beneath the visible tips of the wood, the piles have become an important habitat for marine life and are a protected bree­ding ground for fish.

At Little Island, the poles become the deck: they merge into planters that connect to each other and form the park’s surface.

Heather­wick Studio envi­saged the pier as a complete expe­ri­ence; a single, cohe­sive object, rather than unre­lated elements stuck toge­ther. Instead of sticks holding up a deck, the piles become the deck – they extend into plan­ters that join toge­ther to create the park’s surface. The height of the piles varies to create the park’s contours: the corner of the pier is lifted to allow sunlight to reach the marine habitat, and the edge falls to define hills, view­points and to carve out a natural amphi­theatre for perfor­mances. In this way, the pier and its supporting struc­ture are one.

The plan­ters, or ‘pots’ are filled with more than a hundred diffe­rent species of indi­ge­nous trees and plants, which encou­rage biodi­ver­sity and are able to thrive in New York’s climate – each corner of the island repres­ents a diffe­rent micro­cli­mate.

The amphitheatre stage offers sunsets over the Hudson River, including views of the Statue of Liberty.

To empha­sise the feeling of escape, Little Island’s foot­print sits in the middle of the water between piers 54 and 56. Access is via two acces­sible ‘gang­planks’, and oriented in a conti­nua­tion of the street grid. Inside, paths wind through trees and grassy seating areas to hidden, unex­pected views.

Resto­ring the enter­tain­ment venue that was lost when Pier 54 fell into disre­pair, the park inte­grates three perfor­mance spaces. On the furthest edge, shel­tered by the hills and surroun­ding trees, is an acou­sti­cally-opti­mised 700-seat amphi­theatre with natural stone seating – ist stage is set against the spec­ta­cular back­drop of sunset over the Hudson River and views of the Statue of Liberty.

To the south is a more inti­mate, 200-seat spoken word stage. In the centre is a flexible venue with capa­city for larger scale events – its hard paving brings to the surface the tessel­lated pattern of the piles.

With its unique mix of venues and parkland, Little Island is a true oasis in the pace of Manhattan.

There are roughly 400 diffe­rent species of trees, shrubs, grasses and peren­nials throug­hout Little Island and at least 100 diffe­rent species of trees through the park that are suited to the New York climate. Each corner of the island repres­ents a diffe­rent micro­cli­mate depen­ding on the topo­graphy, sun expo­sure and wind patterns.

With its unique mix of venues and park­land, Little Island is a pause in the pace of Manhattan; a place where New Yorkers and visi­tors can cross the river to lie under a tree, watch a perfor­mance, catch the sunset and feel connected to the water and natural world.

We did this.

Project Data

 

Architects

Heather­wick Studio
356–364 Gray’s Inn Road
London WC1X 8BH
Verei­nigtes König­reich

Client

Hudson River Park Trust (HRPT)
Pier 55 Project Fund (P55P)

Team

Thomas Heather­wick, Mat Cash, Paul West­wood, Neil Hubbard, Nick Ling, Sofia Amodio, Simona Auteri, Mark Burrows, Jorge Xavier Méndez-Cáceres, John Cruwys, Antoine van Erp, Alex Flood, Michal Gryko, Ben Holmes, Ben Jacobs, Francis McCloskey, Stepan Marti­novsky, Simon Ng, Wojtek Nowak, Giovanni Parodi, Enrique Pujana, Akari Take­ba­yashi, Ondrej Tichý, Ahira Sanjeet, Charles Wu, Meera Yadave

Address

Pier 55 at Hudson River Park
Hudson River Greenway
NY 10014
Verei­nigte Staaten

Opening

2021

Author

Heather­wick Studio

 

Construction Site

Plans

Videos

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Vosges Stadium

Vosges Stadium in Basel

Get out!

A great example for activating public spaces and rooftop areas in an increasingly dense urban context.

The design of the schoolyard no longer met the needs of today’s schools and pupils.

The Vosges Stadium is the result of the rede­sign of a schoo­lyard used by three schools in the north of Basel.  Instead of reno­vating old plant troughs and foun­tains, MET Archi­tects installed a bold playing field, acti­vating three schools and a roof area.

The Vogesen, Pesta­lozzi and St. Johann schools in the north of Basel form an open block peri­meter around a schoo­lyard with an under­ground gymna­sium and swim­ming hall. The hall, built in 1980 by the archi­tects Gass and Hafner, is spanned by six concrete girders.

Due to recur­ring problems with the water­tight­ness of the ceiling and the layout of the cour­tyard no longer meeting the needs of the surroun­ding schools, the reno­va­tion of the struc­ture and rede­sign of the space was commis­sioned in 2017.

With just a few interventions, MET Architects cleared the schoolyard of structures that had fallen out of time. 

The schoo­lyard was cleared of above-ground struc­tures such as skylights, a foun­tain and plant troughs, as well as the old insu­la­tion and pave­ment. The new floor was insu­lated and sealed to prevent water from seeping in again. On top, a 12 cm thick concrete distri­bu­tion slab was installed for the traf­fi­ca­bi­lity of the surface. The areas adja­cent to the surroun­ding buil­dings were sealed with rolled asphalt.

Laid out with synthetic sports floo­ring, the cour­tyard now offers two basket­ball courts. The blea­chers were dismantled down to their supporting struc­ture, revised and supple­mented with two covered grand­stands for spec­ta­tors, which extend across the entire width of the court and form a stadium-like space that can be used by the schools and the neigh­bour­hood for recess, sports and leisure acti­vi­ties.

The pitch has been visually extended beyond its edge and forms the new schoolyard as a unity, even when viewed from above.

The two roofs, each projec­ting about six meters, feature very promin­ently from the schools. In order to protect the concrete from perme­a­ting mois­ture and do justice to the high visi­bi­lity, the roofs were covered with the same red synthetic surface used for the basket­ball courts.

The playing field is opti­cally extended over the upper floors of the surroun­ding buil­dings.

The Vosges Stadium is a great example for acti­vating public spaces and rooftop areas in an incre­asingly dense urban context.

We did this.

Project data

Architects

MET Archi­tects GmbH SIA
Klybeck­strasse 141 / K 102
CH — 4002 Basel

Client

Hoch­bauamt Kanton Basel-Stadt

Pitch surface

CONICA AG
Indus­trie­strasse 26
CH – 8207 Schaff­hausen

Address

Stadion Vogesen
St. Johanns-Ring 17
CH — 4056 Basel

Opening

2019

Photograph

Ruedi Walti, Basel

Author

MET Archi­tects

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Playscape

Playscape in Peking

Playing in the streets

waa have created a space that explicitly encourages children to take their own decisions.

We don’t think about our balance until we lose it.

The play­scape is a refur­bish­ment inside an exis­ting indus­trial complex in the north of Beijing. A 1970’s warehouse complex for grain storage supported by a trans­port faci­lity.

Our client was a health­care provider specia­li­zing in obser­ving, and supporting children’s deve­lo­p­ment rela­ting to move­ment for a broad range of age groups. 

Playing on the street is set to become the alternative to gaming on electronic devices.

We believe the missing element of a child’s deve­lo­p­ment in a modern Chinese city is chiefly a func­tio­ning neigh­bor­hood. We hoped to create the expe­ri­ence of street play and prio­ri­tize the reduc­tion for gizmos and screen time. Drawing inspi­ra­tion from popular culture of the past and abstrac­ting important iden­ti­ties for our new neighborhood’s character. The play­scape embo­died the follo­wing traits:

  1. Hide and seek (Group inter­ac­tion): Free-will is vital to engage a child’s imagi­na­tion and promo­ting this inter­ac­tion within a group.
  2. Adven­ture play­ground (Risk): Balance is invi­sible until we lose it, children decide what level of risk they feel comfor­table to expe­ri­ence.
  3. Nook and Cranny (Body Propor­tion): Spaces are desi­gned for children with nooks to explore and under­stand ergo­no­mics.
  1. Maze (Disco­very): Places out of sight need to be explored to reveal them­selves, the most effi­cient or direct route is not always the most enjoyable.
  2. Fantasy: (Imagi­na­tion) The land­scape is abstracted by remo­ving icono­graphy and allow flexi­bi­lity in thought based scena­rios.

There are three design and architectural interventions in particular that make Playscape unique: the pipes, the roof and the mounds.

Three main archi­tec­tural inter­ven­tions embedded the themes of play from the concept;

  1. Pipe: Focuses on smaller Nook’s to test proprio­cep­tion (body aware­ness). These arma­tures are arranged as a series of connec­ting bridges and stair­cases. Five diameter scales can be observed; 2.3m (Walk­ways) 1.7m (Stair­cases) 1.3m (Safety Balus­trade) 0.8m (Slides) 0.4m (External Lighting).

2. Roof: Pres­ents a high point to over­view the stage set and its possi­bi­li­ties and poses a choice to children to embrace unor­thodox routes. A full loop can be made and children can travel from the terrace and tran­s­cend under the mound through slides which vary in height from 7m to 4.3m. The network impresses upon them alter­na­tive direc­tions to goals, some­times the second shor­test route is more fun.

  1. Mound: Enhances deve­lo­p­ment in senses rela­ting to equi­li­brium (Balance) and freedom of decision making. The mounds allow children to explore and decide on their comfort in regards to risk and by tran­s­cen­ding a variety of inclines at speed. Addi­tional area of covered play was created by harnes­sing area under the topo­graphy. Access to which can be gained through a number of cuts or slides from the terrace level.
waa

A wrap-around rooftop terrace facilitates child observation and offers parent-specific amenities such as a terrace bar.

The buil­ding complex is formed by a cluster of exis­ting warehouses encir­cling a cour­tyard. A public street discon­nects the south buil­ding which is re-connected by the use of an aerial bridge to link the roof terraces. Access also provides a private route to an adjoi­ning Kinder­garten, and an option to enter the adja­cent public park.

The exis­ting cluster provides for 3 internal play spaces. Play­space 1 is a single level low pitched 6m volume. Used for 2–4 year olds as a crawl­space with hanging fabrics. Features also include a soft space topo­graphy for babies supple­mented with a restau­rant and library.

Play­space 2 is divided verti­cally into three levels. A tiered envi­ron­ment for ages over 4 inclu­ding a subter­ra­nean inter­ac­tive envi­ron­ment, a steep clim­bing topo­graphy, with a suspended tensile Net all connected with slides. Addi­tional directed lear­ning can be found on level 2 and 3 with a total of 6 Multi­func­tional Classroom’s. A single slide connects verti­cally 7m from the class­room to level 1. The South Buil­ding competes the cour­tyard adja­cent to the road with views into a public park.

All buil­dings have a looped roof terrace easing parents obser­va­tion of children, while being able to access parent specific amen­i­ties inclu­ding a terraced bar.

The architects make a point of distorting scales and manipulating movement processes.

Children are often passive in decision making scena­rios. Play is often the only period under their own control. The Design Focus was to address the missing elements of inner city dwel­ling, distorting scales, mani­pu­la­ting move­ment sequences to build a tool for sensory lear­ning. Where the icono­graphy of the project becomes about the acti­vity and embra­cing a degree of risk we hope to nudge children to imagine and feel what they see as the limits to their own adven­ture.

“In Play you don’t foresee an end product. It allows you to suspend judgment. Often the solu­tion to one problem sparks a possi­bi­lity for another set of problems… In the actual buil­ding of some­thing you see connec­tions you could not possibly have fore­seen on that scale, unless you were physi­cally there” Richard Serra

We did this.

Project data

Alle, die an diesem Projekt betei­ligt waren.

Architects

waa | we archi­tech anony­mous
Bldg 81#-1F
4 Gongti Beilu
Chaoyang Dist,
Beijing China 100027

Client

Beijing NuanQin

Team

Di Zhang, Jack Young, Minghui Huo, Yuqing Feng, Min Wang, Jing Zhu, Mengbo Cao,  Hualin Yang, Weiya Li, Qiwen Cao, Heff Jin, Jinbin Zhang, Lida Tang

Address

Langyuan Station
Dongba, Chaoyang District
Beijing, China

Opening

2021

Photograph

Tian Fang­Fang

Author

waa | we archi­tech anony­mous

Video

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Camp del Ferro

Camp del Ferro Sports Centre in Barcelona

Undergrounding

URBAN DEVELOPMENT, GREAT DESIGN, BEST ENERGY BALANCES — AND THREE GREAT SPORTS HALLS.

Sagrera is attempting to create a new urban identity. The Camp del Ferro is supposed to help with this.

Given the large volume required by the func­tional brief (three sports courts) in rela­tion to the limited dimen­sions of the site and the high urban density of the area, it was decided to semi-under­ground much of the sports complex. The meti­cu­lous design in section of the buil­ding ensures good lighting, natural venti­la­tion, ease of access and safe evacua­tion even of the lower areas.

The decision to parti­ally under­ground the volume not only reduces its visual impact, it also gene­rates an open urban space that is ceded to the city. This space acts as a public foyer to accom­mo­date occa­sional large influxes of visi­tors and users, with entrance via this concourse or plaza that is also the urban finis­hing touch to the widened street.

AIA

The different layouts of the brick façades bring different light into the interior — and give the building volume and texture.

The cons­truc­tion system is based largely on brick, deli­bera­tely revi­si­ting the old facto­ries, warehouses and work­shops that are so nume­rous in the area. The cons­truc­tion and mate­ria­lity of the buil­ding consti­tute its formal expres­sion, its finish, with no added elements. The brick thereby has a high profile.

The low main­ten­ance bare brick façades alter­nate empty and full, opaque, trans­lu­cent and trans­pa­rent parts, and masonry units of diffe­rent formats and colours with the aim of ligh­tening the whole, giving the built volume a texture, a grain, a vibrant pixel­a­tion, while also adap­ting to the diffe­rent orien­ta­tions.

We see brick lattice walls on exposed façades protect the courts from direct sunlight and possible glare, and, conver­sely, large glazed expanses in the lower part of the north-facing façade, opening up to the entrance concourse.

Two of the pitches are located in the basement, with the ancillary rooms and installations in between. The third sports hall occupies the upper floor.

The above ground volume of the buil­ding is finished off by a roof of gently curving, inverted vaults that is inte­grated into the context, somehow suggesting the order and presence of the roofs of neigh­bou­ring warehouses. This curved-line finish helps to lighten the volume of the complex and consti­tutes part of ist formal expres­sion.

Inside, the layout of the brief is very clear. We see not just the super­po­si­tion of the sports courts on diffe­rent levels but also the arran­ge­ment of a central volume contai­ning all the smaller scale elements (chan­ging rooms, storage and services), commu­ni­ca­tions (vertical and hori­zontal) and instal­la­tions. This is a compact volume that sepa­rates the large-scale elements.

There are some good reasons that led to the LEED Gold certification of Camp del Ferro.

Further intrinsic, deli­be­rate conse­quences of semi-under­groun­ding much of the complex are the direct gains obtained thanks to the increase of the complex’s thermal inertia by redu­cing its exposed surfaces.

The building’s energy effi­ci­ency begins with the volu­metric approach of the design. Subse­quently, a whole series of measures on a diffe­rent scale (solar protec­tion, cross venti­la­tion, natural lighting and the use of rene­wable ener­gies) reduces the energy needed for it to func­tion, earning the centre LEED Gold certi­fi­ca­tion.

Camp del Ferro offers all this: urban deve­lo­p­ment, great design inde­pen­dence and quality, the best energy balances — and three great sports halls.

We did this.

Project data

 

Client

BIMSA – Barce­lona d’Infraestructures Muni­ci­pals

Address

Camp del Ferro
Plaça d’Al­bert Badia i Mur
ES — 08027 Barce­lona

Opening

2020

Photograph

José Hevia
Simón García (arqa)

YOU MAY HAVE MORE OF THIS.

HOW CAN WE BE OF SERVICE TO YOU?

Contact

Adresse
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Telefon
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Mail
contact@moresports.network

L’Alqueria del Basket

L’Alqueria del Basket in Valencia

Discreet orange

Not only the discreet use of the club colours is exem­plary, espe­ci­ally in profes­sional sport.

” After all, our main goal was to create a space where children have the best conditions to play and learn.”

ERRE arqui­tec­tura

L’Al­queria del Basket arises from the need to create a space that shel­ters the academy of the Valencia Basket team. A large-scale sports complex where the new gene­ra­tions could play in the best condi­tions was neces­sary.

The complex was desi­gned by ERRE arqui­tec­tura from Valencia.

“Alqueria” means “country estate” or “country house”. This is where the Valencia Basket Club wants to accommodate its more than 500 talents.

L’Alqueria del Basket emerges due to the growing number of young players who are part of the club and the need to create a unique space to house them all. Curr­ently, more than 500 children train in diffe­rent parts of the city. Ther­e­fore, it was neces­sary to create a “house”, a big complex where all of them could train in the best condi­tions possible.

The project is located next to La Fuente de San Luís, the current stadium of the club, and its area covers roughly 15,000 square meters. The program is divided into two volumes and is composed by a total of 13 courts: 9 indoor and 4 outdoor.

The design focused on aspects of durability, comfort and lighting from the very beginning,

The first volume contains the largest court where the main games and the trai­ning sessions take place.

The second one contains 8 courts desi­gned for trai­ning purposes. These courts can be simul­ta­neously used and become inde­pen­dent by an auto­mated curtains system.

The project is located next to La Fuente de San Luís, the current stadium of the club, and its area covers roughly 15,000 square meters. The program is divided into two volumes and is composed by a total of 13 courts: 9 indoor and 4 outdoor.

The first volume contains the largest court where the main games and the trai­ning sessions take place.

Lights and colours are the defining elements inside L’Alqueria del Basket.

The second one contains 8 courts desi­gned for trai­ning purposes. These courts can be simul­ta­neously used and become inde­pen­dent by an auto­mated curtains system.

The basket­ball courts are distri­buted around a central axis which has two levels:

  • The lower level houses services such as locker rooms for both teams on each court, gym, nursing area and rooms for physio­the­rapy.
  • The upper level is dedi­cated to teaching, but it also contains areas desi­gned for family members who want to enjoy the matches.

The ascent to the upper level is via an orange ramp — this is the club’s colour. The use of the club colours is exem­plary, espe­ci­ally in profes­sional sports.

We did this.

Project data

Architects

ERRE arqui­tec­tura
Maestro Gozalbo 20
ESP — 46005 Valencia

Photograph

Daniel Rueda

Author

ERRE arqui­tec­tura

Opening

2017

Address

L’Alqueria del Basket
Carrer del Bomber Ramon Duart
ESP — 46013 València

YOU MAY HAVE MORE OF THIS.

HOW CAN WE BE OF SERVICE TO YOU?

Contact

 

Adresse
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Telefon
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Mail
contact@moresports.network

Wettingen Cantonal School

Wettingen Cantonal School Sports Hall

Carved in stone

The Cistercian monastery in Wettingen is a special place. A sports hall has to be subordinate here.

With respect for the historic monastery view, the Wettingen cantonal school sports halls were built underground.

The Cister­cian monas­tery in Wettingen is a cultural monu­ment of national importance. When the cantonal school moved into the monas­tery premises in 1979, the school’s sports hall with a swim­ming pool was cons­tructed on the common land outside the monas­tery area.

To main­tain the histo­rical view of the monas­tery, the sports hall and swim­ming pool were built under­ground, around a deep cour­tyard with longi­tu­dinal sides that provided the adjoi­ning gymna­siums with daylight.

The planned extension of the sports halls built in 1979 was also realised in accordance with the monastic mission statement.

The planned exten­sion of the Wettingen cantonal school sports halls is also required to adhere to this prin­ciple and is thus being deve­loped under­ground. Since the orien­ta­tion and provi­sion of daylight play a decisive role, a linear prome­nade was planned as the starting point for the design, forming a clear and orderly link between the old and the new buil­dings.

All the main uses are either directly adja­cent to this access route, or the prome­nade affords a gene­rous view of them.

The chosen form of orga­ni­sa­tion with linear elements creates a calm and clear impres­sion of Wettingen cantonal school sports halls from the outside. A window strip facing north accom­pa­nies the prome­nade in the vici­nity of the triple sports hall.

The art on the building plays with the metaphor of the rough rock on which the Cistercian monastery is enthroned high above the Limmat and into which the new sports hall was chiselled.

Brin­ging toge­ther the illu­mi­na­ting zone and the spec­ta­tors’ gallery avoids any irri­ta­ting back­light effects when people are watching the sports being played. And, in the other direc­tion, when looking out from the hall, the observer sees a wide relief wall.

The art on the buil­ding is by the Lang/Baumann duo and plays on the meta­phor of the rough rock on which the Cister­cian monas­tery towers above the Limmat river and into which, in the true sense of the word, the new sports hall has been chiselled.

The shadows cast by the concrete blocks change over the course of the day and the year, giving the under­ground observer a feel for the time of day or year.

We did this.

Project data

Architects

:mlzd
Allee­strasse 25
CH — 2503 Biel/Bienn

Client

Immo­bi­lien Kanton Aargau
Depar­te­ment Finanzen und Ressourcen
CH-Aarau

Team

Pat Tanner, Alex­ander Unsin, Andreas Frank, Daniele Di Giac­into, Claude Marbach, David Locher, Julia Wurst, Mari­anne Rüger, Jona­than Anders, Ronja Engel­hardt, Mart Maurer, Belén Jatuff Mathis

Address

Kantons­schule Wettingen
Klos­ter­strasse 11
CH — 5430 Wettingen

Opening

2018

Photograph

Ariel Huber / EDIT images
Brau­er­strasse 45
CH — 8004 Zürich

Author

:mlzd

 

 

Plans

 

 

Photos

Video

YOU MAY HAVE MORE OF THIS.

HOW CAN WE BE OF SERVICE TO YOU?

Contact

 

Addess
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

Flexperience

Fall protection systems

Soft landing included

Fall protection coverings and fall protection systems are at least as important as the devices we fall from.

IN SCHOOL AND PLAYGROUND, BUT ALSO WHEN EATING OR SHOPPING, WE WANT HIGH-QUALITY EXERCISE OFFERS FOR OUR CHILDREN.

Fall protec­tion cove­rings and fall protec­tion systems are at least as important as the devices we fall from. In school and on the play­ground, but also when eating or shop­ping, we want high-quality exer­cise offers for our children. Of course, secu­rity plays a crucial role in this.

The chal­lenges are diverse, as are the solu­tions. The FLEXPERIENCE fall protec­tion system offers maximum safety. Here are three examples.

IN THE MALL OF SWITZERLAND, NOT ONLY QUESTIONS OF SAFETY, BUT ALSO THE DESIGN POSSIBILITIES WERE DECISIVE.

The Mall of Switz­er­land in Ebikon (Canton Lucerne) is the second largest shop­ping and leisure desti­na­tion in Switz­er­land with a total area of 65,000 m². The concept of the mall combines shops and restau­rants with leisure and sports faci­li­ties and more than 1,500 m² of play areas.

When it came to the indoor play world in Ebikon, it wasn’t just ques­tions of safety that were decisive, but also the wide range of design options with Flex­pe­ri­ence.

The use of a total of six diffe­rent colors resulted in a colorful and diverse world of games in the Mall of Switz­er­land that is unique in Switz­er­land. The instal­la­tion heights of the Flex­pe­ri­ence fall protec­tion floors of 40 to 90 mm guarantee safe play, fun and move­ment with a maximum required fall height of 2.60 m.

With a color mix of red and bright red, the first FLEXPERIENCE fall protection surface in Germany is rolling out the red carpet for its young guests in the restaurant.

The first FLEXPERIENCE fall protec­tion area in Germany was put into opera­tion in summer 2019 in a new branch of the system cate­ring provider “Koch­löffel” in Stein­furt.

With a color mix of red and bright red, the installed fall protec­tion system rolls out the red carpet for the young guests in the restau­rant. Toge­ther with the indi­vi­du­ally desi­gned play and slide tower, the children can play care­free and safely on the appro­xi­m­ately 25 m² fall protec­tion area every time they visit the restau­rant.

Thanks to the medium gray chosen for the top layer, the play area completely takes up the design of the surrounding buildings and the new building.

When the Weis­sen­stein school complex in Würen­lingen was expanded in May 2020, the outdoor faci­li­ties were also rede­si­gned. With the new cons­truc­tion of various school rooms, a kinder­garten, audi­to­rium and a double gymna­sium, the school buil­ding became a “school living space”.

The design of the play area and the fall protec­tion surface also take this idea into account. While other FLEXPERIENCE refe­rences score with their color design, the fall protec­tion floo­ring in Würen­lingen is not colorful, but shows itself in the urban design. Thanks to the medium gray chosen for the top layer, the play area comple­tely takes up the design of the surroun­ding buil­dings and the new buil­ding that has been created and fits perfectly into the overall ensemble of the newly desi­gned school grounds.

Various systems were installed on the 76 m² fall protec­tion area due to the diffe­rent fall heights. In addi­tion to the optical harmony, it guaran­tees care­free and safe play at a height of up to three meters.

Comple­mented by the unusual play equip­ment made of metal, an extra­or­di­na­rily futu­ristic play­ground was created that under­lines the crea­tive poten­tial and versa­ti­lity of the fall protec­tion cove­rings used.

FLEXPERIENCE offers some special features that distinguish this innovation from conventional fall protection floor coverings.

The novelty of this system is the special base layer granule deve­loped and manu­fac­tured only for this purpose. For the base layer of a FLEXPERIENCE fall protec­tion system, only EPDM rubber granules are used, which are 100% virgin mate­rial.

The granule is foamed using the exclu­sive “Swiss Cheese Prin­ciple”. This unique tech­no­logy creates small air pockets, which lead to parti­cu­larly soft and cushio­ning surfaces.

Thanks to the mate­rials used, the system is abso­lutely harm­less in terms of toxi­co­logy, envi­ron­mental and human compa­ti­bi­lity. This is another major diffe­rence to some systems that use recy­cled granules from used tires.

With FLEXPERIENCE, the customer not only receives indi­vi­dual compon­ents, but also all the mate­rials required to build a fall protec­tion surface: base layer granule, colored EPDM granule for the top layer and the binding agent that holds ever­y­thing toge­ther. He also receives instal­la­tion instruc­tions.

This has the advan­tage that all the neces­sary tests and certi­fi­ca­tions have already been carried out. This saves effort and costs and gives the client the certainty of instal­ling a fully tested, coor­di­nated and safe fall protec­tion system.

FLEXPERIENCE is a globally available and licensed system that is sold and profes­sio­nally installed by speci­ally quali­fied regional license part­ners. That means compe­tence from produc­tion to handover.

FLEXPERIENCE fall protection floor coverings meet the highest requirements in terms of fall protection and environmental compatibility.

FLEXPERIENCE was deve­loped to ensure maximum safety in child­ren’s play­grounds. The two-layer fall protec­tion system is the result of more than 50 years of expe­ri­ence in the manu­fac­ture and rese­arch of rubber granules. The fall protec­tion floor cove­rings meet the highest requi­re­ments for fall protec­tion and envi­ron­mental compa­ti­bi­lity.

Thanks to the envi­ron­men­tally friendly compon­ents made from 100% virgin mate­rial and the inno­va­tive SCP tech­no­logy with which the base layer granule is foamed, the FLEXPERIENCE fall protec­tion floo­ring corre­sponds to the spirit of the times.

And in addi­tion to sustaina­bi­lity, this expects a soft and safe landing — and not just “they always come down.

We did this.

Project data

 

Fall protection systems

GEZOLAN AG
Werk­strasse 30
CH — 6252 Dagmer­sellen

Photograph

GEZOLAN AG

Author

Johannes Bühl­be­cker
More Sports Media

© Gezolan AG

Photos

Video

You may have more of this.

How can we be of service to you?

Contact

 

Address
More Sports Media
Am Weit­kamp 17
D‑44795 Bochum

Phone
+49 234 5466 0374
+49 172 4736 332

Email
contact@moresports.network

GDPR Cookie Consent with Real Cookie Banner