64

May 2008

 

BIG+JDS: vm houses, copenhagen

BIG+JDS: vm houses, copenhagen

 

PLOT = BIG + JDS


Vm Houses, Copenhagen

Text: BIG + JDS

The VM Houses, shaped like a V and an M when seen from above, represent the first residential project to be built in the new district of Copenhagen known as Ørestaden. The upcoming neighbourhood is connected to the center of the city by the new metro system.
The manipulated perimeter block of the V building is clearly defined in its four corners, but opened internally and along the sides. The vis-à-vis with the neighbouring M house is eliminated by pushing the slab in its centre, ensuring diagonal views to the vast, open fields around. The building volume provides optimal air, daylight and views to all apartments with triangular-shaped balconies characterizing the south facing facade. All apartments have a double-height space to the north and wide panoramic views to the south.
People can access the apartments from a central corridor that cuts through the building volume and opens up towards daylight and views at each end. The corridors create connections to elevators and staircases and function as community places for meetings and children games.
A similar logic of the diagonal slab is used in the M building, although in this case it is broken down into smaller portions. Here, the typology of Le Corbusier’s Unitè d’habitation is reinterpreted and transformed: the central corridors are short and receive light from both ends. Individual terraces are all on the south facing side of the building, and the roof terrace can be reached from the central corridors.
The apartments are characterized by the interaction of mutually complementing rooms - with double-height studios near kitchens and living rooms, with large and open rooms that can be broken down into smaller ones and spatial attics which are naturally lit.
The VM Houses are made up of simple but exquisite materials with large glass facades framed by fancy wood. Floors are made up of solid oak wood while dark, hard wood has been used for the balcony floors. Walls and ceilings appear with a somewhat raw finish in white concrete, and all internal stairs and handrails come in white painted steel. All the apartments’ external walls are made up of glass.
As the first residential complex in the area, it was important to create an inviting environment. To provide public space around the buildings, the V volume is raised on five metres high columns, opening up the courtyard to the park area on the south side while the facades are articulated with niches and angles, creating a series of informal meeting places.
One of the most important aspects of this housing scheme focuses on the development of diverse appartment typologies, ranging from single-floor plans to triplexes. The 114-unit V building is composed of 40 different appartment types, while the M building with its 95 units contains 40 typologies.