BIG moves New York office to bright space in Dumbo
덴마크 건축디자인회사 빅이 뉴욕 브룩클린 의 화이넨셜 디스트릭트에 새로운 오피스를 오픈하였습니다.
architecture firm BIG has moved its New York office from the Financial District to Brooklyn, allowing the studio to expand its workshop and enjoy a private patio overlooking Manhattan.
The BIG Studio is on the ninth floor of a 12-storey building from 1912, spanning a full city block in Brooklyn’s Dumbo neighbourhood. Designed in-house by BIG‘s interiors team, the office is characterised by its open floor plan and ample natural light.
Although not on the top storey, the project has immediate access to a private rooftop with views of the Brooklyn Bridge and Manhattan. The entire space spans 50,000 square feet (4,645 square metres) at 45 Main Street, and is entirely surrounded in windows.
Previously, BIG’s New York office was located at 61 Broadway in Lower Manhattan, on the other side of the East River. Moving to the new building allowed the firm’s workshop to quadruple in size. Now, the studio has two large digital fabrication and assembly spaces, complete with a woodworking area.
The Brooklyn office has a steely aesthetic with concrete floors, white interiors, hardly any walls, and contemporary fixtures and furnishings.
브룩클린 오피스는 스틸 과 콘크리트의 느낌을 유지하면서 흰색 페인트를 통해 공간에 밝은 분위기를 제공 하였습니다.
Repetition is key to the design with structural pillars left exposed, and a grid of 150 light fixtures by Danish design firm KiBiSi, formed by BIG founder Bjarke Ingels along with Lars Holme Larsen and Jens Martin Skibsted.
Other repeated elements include glass walls and doors used for meeting room walls and as entry doors, as well as steel in three finishes: chromatised, hot rolled and galvanised.
A canteen, or office kitchen, is located at the centre of the plan, and features steel cabinets and light wood dining tables and chairs. Green and pink tones found across the chromatised steel cabinetry add hints of colour.
On the south side of the building is an Exhibition Hallway that links the east and west ends, and is lined with plywood shelves that showcase various massing studies and model iterations as well as architectural material samples. On another side is a library, with felt-like chairs in dove and slate grey and low glass tables for informal meetings.
Furnishings throughout the office include a large collection by KiBiSi, such as the VIA chairs created for BIG’s pyramidal housing complex on Manhattan’s West Side. The studio’s roulade, brick sofa and prototype pill-shaped benches can also be found throughout the office.
Meeting rooms have colour-coded scoop chairs, with hues spanning bright red to cobalt blue, relating to BIG’s monograph Hot to Cold: An Odyssey of Architectural Adaptation.
Other lights in the office are from the Alphabet of Light series by BIG and Artemide, including circle lights around columns, larger pill-shaped lights in meeting rooms, and the lowercase letters that spell out the firm’s name at the entrance.
BIG’s New York office also has access to a separate rooftop provided for all the tenants in the building, which measures 9,500 square feet (882 square metres) and was designed by local firm James Corner Field Operations.
The architecture practice was founded by Ingels in 2005, and also has offices in Copenhagen and London. BIG’s projects in New York City include a pair of twisting towers beside the High Line park, a spiralling skyscraper at Hudson Yards and a police station in The Bronx.
Photography is by Max Touhey.
From Dezeen
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