Location: Budapest, Hungary
Architects: Gábor Turányi, Bence Turányi
Project Team: Éva Pinczés, Levente Skultéti, László Nyitray
Project Year: 2008
Photographs: Zsolt Batár
Located in the south western part of the Hungarian capital of Budapest, Simplon_A was built as the residential part of a mixed-use development and has quickly become a colourful new piece of the neighbouring urban landscape.
The building was rounded at the corner by a gesture that evokes the architecture of the early modernism, such a rhythm of the facade boxes appears in many modern apartments of the surroundings that were built in the 1960th. One of the main design concepts was to create a continuously changing building facade that is highly responsive to the everyday use. All apartments have large, open facades and all have a well-utilizable, covered terrace – loggia. The large openings of the facade are shaded by adjustable aluminium louvers; beside of the sun protection, the additional role is that they allows the light in, therefore, they serve as an excellent personalised visual filter. Certainly the colour of the lamellas is the same to the colour of the given flat – if all louvers are down, the building becomes a real box built by coloured Lego© cubes.
The most important material of the external facade is the coloured glass. Yellow, orange, red, green, dark green, blue turquoise and dark blue: unmixed and bright colours. Each colour of the facade belongs to a certain flat; this colour then appears on the entrance door – therefore the mark of the flat becomes visual- and makes trivial the identification.
The flats can be reached through two vertical transportation cores, which are placed in the two breakpoints of the U-shaped building. Open side corridors heads from the staircases and elevators to the flats, similar to the Budapest tradition, in this way they could be naturally ventilated and lighted from two sides. The open corridors face the miscellaneous and quiet internal garden and the overgrown green-wall. The southern wing of the building is placed on two-storey high ‘V’ shaped legs. Through this semi-covered public area the building and the city contacts each other, the internal garden and facades are visible for the external observers, too. On the ground floor different services (shops, pharmacy and a coffee shop) are accessible for the residents and for the people coming from the neighbourhood.
The building was rounded at the corner by a gesture that evokes the architecture of the early modernism, such a rhythm of the facade boxes appears in many modern apartments of the surroundings that were built in the 1960th. One of the main design concepts was to create a continuously changing building facade that is highly responsive to the everyday use. All apartments have large, open facades and all have a well-utilizable, covered terrace – loggia. The large openings of the facade are shaded by adjustable aluminium louvers; beside of the sun protection, the additional role is that they allows the light in, therefore, they serve as an excellent personalised visual filter. Certainly the colour of the lamellas is the same to the colour of the given flat – if all louvers are down, the building becomes a real box built by coloured Lego© cubes.
The most important material of the external facade is the coloured glass. Yellow, orange, red, green, dark green, blue turquoise and dark blue: unmixed and bright colours. Each colour of the facade belongs to a certain flat; this colour then appears on the entrance door – therefore the mark of the flat becomes visual- and makes trivial the identification.
The flats can be reached through two vertical transportation cores, which are placed in the two breakpoints of the U-shaped building. Open side corridors heads from the staircases and elevators to the flats, similar to the Budapest tradition, in this way they could be naturally ventilated and lighted from two sides. The open corridors face the miscellaneous and quiet internal garden and the overgrown green-wall. The southern wing of the building is placed on two-storey high ‘V’ shaped legs. Through this semi-covered public area the building and the city contacts each other, the internal garden and facades are visible for the external observers, too. On the ground floor different services (shops, pharmacy and a coffee shop) are accessible for the residents and for the people coming from the neighbourhood.