In our European Tour, we always want to get inspired by built spaces. So the morning after our Amsterdam round-table we went to Amsterdam East, to visit the recently completed De Nieuwe Meent (
@nieuwemeent ), another prototype among the 3 built to test the new housing coop policies.
Architect Andrea Verdecchia (from
@timetoaccess who designed the building) showed us around. This is what we learned:
- The tower is the only part where concrete is used, to stabilize the structure and damp the vibrations from the nearby railway - all the rest is CLT and wood, built using the open-system method, with disassembly in mind.
- There are 2 typologies of apartments: on the groundfloor 11 apartments expanding into the communal courtyard (6 duplexes of 50 sqm, 5 units of 40 sqm); 4 more similar apartments are in the tower, which also has 5 larger apartments for autonomous woongroepen (housing groups), revolving each around a common spine with kitchen and living areas, and each with 5 private rooms.
- Materials are at the core of the design: different bricks clad the exterior, while in the living spaces the wooden interiors are often laid bare; a communal room is plastered using clay, to manage the humidity.
- “Construction cost us 2150 euros per sqm: if we can do it without cutting any sustainability corner, this should be a wake-up call for Dutch developers!”
- The building also includes two commercial spaces, one cafè and a co-working space, that partly contribute to the business case.
We hope De Nieuwe Meent will participate in this award’s Edition, and so can you!
Hurry up, submissions close on the 30 April.
#EuropeanCollectiveHousingAward #collectivehousing #housingcooperative #housing #affordablehousing