13_ Affordable housing for the Baechi Foundation | Gus Wüstemann Architects

Category
Switzerland

NAME

Project title: Affordable housing for the Baechi Foundation

Recommending party
The project has been submitted by:
Gus Wüstemann

 

LOCATION
Country:
Switzerland

City: Zurich

Address: Langgrütstrasse 107, 8047 Zurich 

 

AUTHOR

Designer or design team architects:

gus wüstemann architects / Team:
Bianca Kilian – Project leading Architect, Daniel Pelach, Panagiota Sarantinoudi, Valentin Kokudev.

DETAILS  

Plot Area: 1505 mq

Gross Area: 988,3 mq

Of which residential: 100%
Public/communal areas: 0 %
Facilities for the public: 0%
Business/trade: 0 %
Offices: 0 %

Number of residential units: 9
Typology of users: families
Total building costs Euros: 3.300.000,00 €
Building Cost = Total Bulding Cost / Gross Area: 998,30 €
Floor area ratio = Gross Area / Plot Area: 0,66
Work started on date: Tuesday, 1st August 2017
Work completion date: Monday, 31st December 2018

OWNERSHIP 

Promoter: Baechi Foundation Binderstrasse 58 8702 Zollikon Switzerland www.baechi-muralfoundation.ch
Allotment rule: no
Reduction cost percentage compared to the market value:
– assignement % 30
– rent % 30

ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY

Cost of construction max: The cost of construction lies within the same level of the cost of social housing done by the city of Zürich. This is around 5’000.- / m2 HNF , main surface floor, for about 100+ flats. In our case we are at 5’500.-/m2 for 9 flats.
Rental/sale cost compared to market price: The rental cost are among the cheapest in the city of Zurich. An apartment of 3 rooms and 60m2 is rented out for 1500 CHF/ month. An apartment of 4 rooms and 92m2 is rented out for 2’000.- CHF/month

SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY

Rules of allocation: No
Protection of fragile categories: It was the purpose of the baechi foundation to provide affordable housing for vulnerable users, so there are single mothers and fathers, students and immigrants living in the building.
Involvement of inhabitants in the building process: No – the inhabitants are renting and moved in after the building was completed.
Community accompaniment in the life of the building: No

ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

Functional mixitè: No, just housing.
Common spaces and shared living: The roof terrace is a community space for the inhabitants of the building to promote social life.
The garden with its play areas and sitting niches are open to the public.
Techniques and strategies for environmental saving: The heating system is an earth pump, run with electricity. Carbon-free. There is a minimum of technical installations.  Parts of the building were done in recycled concrete. Massive wooden windows of local pine. In general we were convinced that a modest ecological and economical outlay can still provide a high level of architecture for all.

Description of the project: 

CONTEXT
This housing project is a building of nine flats in the outer green belt of Albisrieden in the city of Zurich. The urban structure is characterized by simple linear buildings from the 1950s with generously sized gardens, which are arranged at right angles to one another. The new building is inside such a green area as part of the rising density within the city, a solitaire, in between the linear buildings.

The Baechi Foundation specifically asked for affordable housing with a great quality of living in the center of Zurich. Natural light, privacy and a spatial moment of generosity, were the focus of this project.

 

ETHICAL EVIDENCE IN CONTEMPORARY HOUSING – SUSTAINABILITY
The project Langgrütstrasse 107 should prove that by targeting interventions in light and space and at the same time reducing common standards, great and lively spaces are possible. This without any additional economical effort. In today’s world, it takes a rethink. Sustainability in the sense of less for the individual, but more for the community is becoming increasingly important. In architecture, here in housing construction, we show with this project – how the shift of the focus, away from connotations and standards – to space, momentum and room quality, makes this possible. These are four two-bedroom apartments of 60m2 and five three-bedroom apartments of 95m2 each.

LOW BUDGET – ARCHITECTURE FOR EVERYBODY
The rents had to be affordable and so all the flats were rented out considerably cheap – the rent is amongst the cheapest in the city of Zurich – Architecture for a low Budget – Architecture for Everybody. 

MORPHOLOGY
Morphologically it is a solid concrete block, organically formed, from which two courtyards were cut out. In these courtyards the living spaces float like bridges, from the morning sun to the evening sun. A continuous space that topographically creates the feeling that the living space is an exterior space – and not an interior space filled up with housing program. This results in an incredible moment of magnitude in a small space. Hence there is a generous open living space – which can be enlarged to the periphery of the balconies and sheltered by the famous wooden persianas from Barcelona. Economically optimized interventions by reducing all the technical installations of the building to a minimum – in swiss standards – we focus on a couple of interventions that add major value to the quality of the living space. These are sliding windows and a built-in bench as the communicative element of the concrete topography.

CONCRETE TOPOGRAPHY AND SENSUALITY
The periphery of the living space is topographically processed and makes the space-limiting elements communicative. Therefore, the building elements and especially the periphery of the space is not a parting wall, but a topographically shaped protagonist – the topography incorporates programmed like wardrobe and living room bench. The bathroom of the 3-bedroom flat is separated from the common area by a sliding door, that does not touch the floor. It keeps the space floating as a common space, what it is and at the same time gives all the intimacy you need.
The entrance to each flat is guided by a condensed massive concrete beam, that catches the moment of entry.

The concrete bench growing out of the bathroom wall, creates a common space just at the entry of the bath sliding door, there is a moment of program intersection. The concrete floor floats in all the bedrooms, letting the common space flow and then inside the room a wooden floor implicates another level of intimacy.