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Cityplot Buiksloterham / Studioninedots + DELVA Landscape Architecture
Cityplot Buiksloterham / Studioninedots + DELVA Landscape ArchitectureSave this picture! Sebastian van DammeArchitects: DELVA Landscape Architecture, StudioninedotsAreaArea of this architecture projectArea:63000 mYearCompletion year of this architecture project Year: 2013 PhotographsPhotographs:Sebastian van DammeMore SpecsLess SpecsSave this picture!Text description provided by the architects. Studioninedots & DELVA's Cityplot Buiksloterham: a pioneering, new urban district built on sustainability and collaboration. In Amsterdam's Buiksloterham, a former industrial harbour is being converted into a circular, mixed-use urban district. Designed in collaboration with DELVA, we introduce Cityplot Buiksloterham one, a pioneering approach to urban, landscape, and social regeneration. Initiated during the last global crisis, Cityplot Buiksloterham is an innovative kind of urban planning. Instead of adopting a rigid top-down master plan, we focused on a flexible, collaborative way of thinking, aiming for a resilient urban system that can constantly adapt to the shifting needs and desires of the community.Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Save this picture!Today, this revitalisation of the former Nedcoat and Air Products sites is rapidly taking shape, with 550 new homes and 4,000m of workspaces, hospitality and public functions. What began as an experimental vision is now a thriving urban district where social and technological innovations meet. Rather than building larger, fixed urban blocks, we committed to a different course of action: creating smaller-scale plots, yet with a great variety of typologies. Work/housing units are radically intermixed with social housing, self-build projects and social hubs. With this approach, we bring individuals, collectives, businesses, investors and developers together to create a more collaborative setting. The plan builds a durable community through 'urban activators' dedicated spaces for initiatives by local entrepreneurs and makers. Drawing on their local value, these initiatives reinforce the district, attract young entrepreneurs and contribute to the community. A new activator, a community room at the heart of the plan, is currently being added and will be available for the neighbourhood to use for their activities.Save this picture!This smaller-scale layout promotes residents to actively shape their district, with its mixed nature fostering an ongoing dialogue between architecture and participants, between functions and economy. Cityplot Buiksloterham is an evolution of our 'Cityplot' concept, with which we also transform other former industrial and harbour areas into sustainable city districts. From our analysis of the Cityplot concept, the 100100-metre plot emerged as the ideal building block size. This generous dimension provides enough space for the very diverse mix of typologies while ensuring accessibility both from the street and from the core. Cityplot Buiksloterham consists of three of these compact plots side by side: Plot A, B and C. We prescribed that all buildings should express their unitary architectural language, which creates greater variety among the buildings, giving the neighbourhood its powerful identity. Public, semi-public, collective and private outdoor spaces alternate at various levels throughout the plan. At ground level, we have added open-ground gardens and large trees, which contribute to creating the circular city.Save this picture!Throughout the area, a route leads residents and visitors along green spaces, squares and walkways. At either end of this route, we introduced two buildings, designed as abstract, architectural objects. These structures provide space for centralised parking of cars and bicycles, and for energy generation. By clustering parking, we could keep the public space car-free and put the pedestrian at the heart of the area. Water is a fundamental element in our design for Cityplot Buiksloterham. Tolhuiskanaal runs prominently along the area, with its quay integrated into the public space. Rainwater is collected and buffered in wadis, on roofs and in crates, after which it is drained into the canal. This helps prevent flooding and improve climate conditions. In future, the public space at the quay will be extended with walking bridges over Tolhuiskanaal, seating elements and green patches. Cityplot Buiksloterham began as an experiment in urban development and has now become a vital part of Amsterdam. The ambition to adopt maximum circularity in a compact area now creates a functioning living environment that people shape with each other.Save this picture!Project gallerySee allShow lessProject locationAddress:Distelweg, Buiksloterham, Amsterdam, The NetherlandsLocation to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.About this officeStudioninedotsOfficePublished on April 01, 2025Cite: "Cityplot Buiksloterham / Studioninedots + DELVA Landscape Architecture" 01 Apr 2025. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1028455/cityplot-buiksloterham-studioninedots-plus-delva-landscape-architecture&gt ISSN 0719-8884Save!ArchDaily?You've started following your first account!Did you know?You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.Go to my stream
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