Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects has won the competition to design an 11,500-square-meter area in Riga's Central District. The project, which will redevelop the city's historic Kimmel Quarter, is aimed at transforming an old brewery site by converting it into a mixed-use development featuring an office building, a hotel, and public facilities such as a public gym, a child care center, café, spa, food court and convenience store.
The proposal involves "restoring facades and strengthening the inherent spatial qualities while shaping the building volumes in a composition that respects the urban scale of the area." Centered around the 30,000-square-meter office building, the masterplan creates courtyards and plazas that turn the former industrial site into a revitalized plaza. The project will keep existing buildings as unaltered as possible and will use recycled bricks from site, adding lush landscaping, brick and timber benches, and "mirroring water elements fed with water from the roofs."
The project fits within the larger ambitions of the city to reach the European Union's 2020 climate & energy package goals. According to the firm, "Kimmel Quarter will become a leader in applying these measures from day one, resulting in a sustainably performing development. Moreover, having an unflinching sustainability strategy with BREEAM as the driving force, Kimmel Quarter has the potential to become an example for future development of the city of Riga over the next 20 years and beyond."
250,000 € Prize / HOUSE OF THE FUTURE 2024/25
Register by Wed, Apr 30, 2025
Submit by Mon, Jun 2, 2025
The Architect's Chair / Edition #3
Register by Wed, Jan 15, 2025
Submit by Tue, Feb 18, 2025
The Home of Shadows / Edition #3
Register by Wed, Jan 29, 2025
Submit by Mon, Mar 3, 2025
Show Garden Competition for Seoul International Garden Show 2025
Register/Submit by Wed, Dec 18, 2024
4 Comments
Admittedly, it is for a project in Riga, but still I didn't see a lot of diversity across those render peeps... See Kaleidoscope aka Nonscandinavia
nam, as you mentioned, this is latvia. the renderings do represent a demographic cross section of a baltic eastern european nation.
To be fair I am not trying to suggest that Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects/this project, are the only or even particularly egregious examples of this problem.
But, there is of course; ableness, age and gender (this project did pretty good in that category, I counted at least 10 [seemingly] gender-normative/cis-females) among other levels/meanings of diversity.
As long as we're keeping track of an infinite number of categories and sounding the alarm when we've inevitably fallen short, there's hope.