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26 PROJECT REPORT: MIXED USE SCHEMES


Beyond the vibrant text, the glazed facade also displays some of the many ways users are able to circulate around the building. The design’s external circulation core is supplemented by 3.25 metre-wide terraces that surround each floor of the building, connected by external staircases that curl around the structure. The latter references one of MVRDV’s most famous early projects, the Dutch Pavilion at the Expo2000 in Hanover.


This public route up the building is intended to blur the distinction between interior and exterior, placing the interior spaces “in conversation” with exterior balconies. These are finished in the same material as the ground-level pavements, emphasising their status as part of the


building’s public areas. Heading inside, the programme across the five floors breaks down into restaurants and bars on the ground floor, the offices of Audi Business Innovations on the top floor, and a gym extending across the floors between. This includes a level housing a swimming pool overlooking the skyline of the historic city centre and mountain panorama on the other side. WERK12’s floor-to-ceiling glass walls, combined with its location near to the train station, provide the upper levels with expansive views towards central Munich, punctuated here and there by the lettering sitting on the building’s terraces. Many of the words in fact take on a new meaning when read in reverse!


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ADF JUNE 2021


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