17_Green Wave | SUPERBLOCK ZT GmbH

Category
2015 Edition, Austria

NAME

Project title: Green Wave

Recommending party
The project has been submitted by: Mag. Michael Baumgartner, WBV GÖD

 

LOCATION
Country:
Austria

City: Wien

Address: Neuwaldegger Straße 31/2

 

AUTHOR

Designer or design team architects: SUPERBLOCK ZT GmbH

DETAILS  

Plot Area: 26.442 sq.m.

Gross Area: 19.268 sq.m.

Of which residential:  95%
Public/communal areas:  3%
Facilities for the public: 0%
Business/trade: 1% Cafè
Offices: 1% Service point

Number of residential units: 164
Typology of users: families
Total building costs Euros: 20.000.000,00 €
Building Cost = Total Bulding Cost / Gross Area: 756,94 €/ sq.m.
Floor area ratio = Gross Area / Plot Area: 0,73
Work started on date: Thursday, 1st April 2010
Work completion date: Monday, 17th February 2014

OWNERSHIP 

Promoter: WBV GÖD
Allotment rule: Rented appartements
Reduction cost percentage compared to the market value:
– assignment: 0%
– rent: 60%

Description of the project: 

Our cities are growing, and their limits are increasingly expanding. The project “Grüne Welle” (“Green Wave”) of architects SUPERBLOCK and housing developer WBV GÖD is now completed, featuring an exemplary residential complex on the periphery of Vienna – between the city and the countryside – in which it could gain the first prize in the developer competition 2010. The urban “village-green” arrangement and functional density of this subsidised housing development strengthens neighbourly ties, whereas its typological diversity promotes cross-generational and social mixing between residents.

Inspired by Victor Hufnagel’s idea of a densified garden-city, „Grüne Welle“ boasts a linear “village green” arrangement. This helps avoid scattered urbanisation and leaves aside non-useable buffer zones. The “village green”, framed by two rippled lines of terraced houses, explicitly divides the outdoor areas into shared and private space: It serves as an open access communication zone and shared space and is meant to bring different groups of residents together, quiet back yards are located behind the terraces. The terraces are accompanied by a unit of multi-storey apartment blocks, running along the development, providing a spatial connection between the complex and the planned densely built-up residential area.

The ground floor fulfils various functions related to daily needs: bicycle and stroller storage, laundry room, an ATM, a multifunctional common room, and the Service Centre, the first point of contact for residents with problems or questions.

To generate functional density and a sustainable mix of future resident groups there are several types of apartment typologies: The terraced house settlement consists of three types of houses with 140m², 95m2 and 65m2 (affordable home ownership in a green area) the units in the multi-storey residential buildings also offer a wide variety of apartment options, from maisonettes to big penthouses.

A living group dwells at an entire stairwell (including common room) and represents a model of a close neighbourhood community, accompanied by social moderation. 10% of the units were built to be accessible to residents with impairments. These residents were deliberately targeted with informative material and info-events right from the tendering process onwards. Happily, two of the terraced houses are home to supervised youth groups from “SOS-Kinderdorf” (orphan charity organisation). During the settling-in phase the residents’ group and the various initiatives were overseen by “Wohnbund_Consult” and the outdoor areas by “Land in Sicht”.