Measured Confidence

The new school building and the heritage-listed historic structure form a harmonious whole

SBH Schulbau Hamburg, a state-owned enterprise, oversees the construction and management of approximately 3,000 school buildings across the city. Nettelnburg, an open all-day school in the Fiddigshagen area of Bergedorf, was recently expanded by BKSA Hamburg—a joint venture between BKS Architekten and the assmann group. The expansion project encompassed a new school building with administrative facilities and a dual-court sports hall, along with comprehensive renovation of existing communal spaces and classrooms. The campus comprises structures of varying ages, construction methods, and typologies, with the heritage-protected main building from 1928 serving as the architectural centerpiece.

The two-story addition naturally completes the school complex's southeastern corner, thoughtfully framing the playground while providing a clean transition to the residential neighborhood beyond. It establishes a dialogue with the extension building west of the main structure, transforming the playground into the campus's true center. The dual-court sports hall with its changing facilities and equipment storage occupies the ground floor, while the upper level accommodates new administrative and all-day care spaces. Given the building's direct connection to the heritage-listed main building, its façade design demanded particular care. The original brick structure is defined by a uniform grid-patterned perforated façade, striking stair towers on its north face, and white wooden windows, with cornices articulating the base and eaves. The new building mirrors this approach with its own red brick façade.

The new building honors the linear grid rhythm of the existing façade through carefully composed window bands that reinterpret rather than merely replicate the original design language. Specific window configurations for classrooms, support spaces, and the cafeteria directly reference the historic building. The stairwells and central corridor are legibly expressed on the exterior. Projecting bay windows serving flexible learning spaces punctuate the strict grid as intentional compositional breaks. By adopting the same corridor system and eave heights, the new structure integrates seamlessly. The glazed joint between old and new deliberately recedes from both façade planes, ensuring each volume reads as distinct yet unified. This transparency at the threshold opens the building both visually and conceptually. Across material, appearance, and form, the ensemble achieves a cohesive architectural whole.

www.bksa.de

Photos:
Ralf Buscher
www.ralfbuscher.de

(Published in CUBE Hamburg 03|24)

Nothing found.

Into the Spotlight

The sculptural reception pavilion commands attention and stands out as an unmissable landmark

A Place to Gather

The new Mariä Himmelfahrt parish hall in Miesbach embodies a striking balance between contemporary architecture and sacred tradition.

Homecoming

Adaptive Renewal: Converting and Extending a Neckarsulm Home for Active Living

Nothing found.

1806271310_6279_44_700pixel

Moorland, Not the Mediterranean

The architects' two cube-shaped house modules create distinct zones—one serving the need for tranquility...

13286_CreativeBlocks_hieplerbrunier_001_19_700px

An Inspiring Mix

Creative Blocks pioneer new models for living and working together creatively

MD_Baaken Harbour_003_web_15_700px

In the Heart of It All

Vibrant Diversity and Public Housing in the Multigenerational Quarter

CAPE_1877_c_15_700pixel

The architecture of tables

Sustainable Furniture as Spatial Design

neubau_am_see_01_15_700pixel

A Place to Breathe

A Lakeside Sanctuary

From concrete to green

The Remarkable Transformation of an Overlooked Space

05_Wholesale Market Theatre Pavilion_johandehlin_copyright_19_700px

A smart solution

The pavilion for the Großmarkt Theatre: sustainable, flexible, and efficient.

meridian_spa_michel_interior_112019-077_19_700px

Transformation at the Harbour

Reimagining a Spa and Fitness Destination at Michel