Taking an old abandon manufacturing building and giving it a new purpose, is no new idea to a New Yorker. The architecture firm MVRDV based in Rotterdam have taken it to a new level, in their project Silo Towers located in Islands Brygge, Copenhagen. This project entailed the transformation of two silos for cereals in the old commercial port of Copenhagen, and converted into apartment buildings.
The structure of the silos has been preserved and the spaces of the new apartments are hung from the preexisting walls, leaving the interior space empty for circulation. The internal space is capped by a glass roof and and circulation similar to that of Frank Lloyd Wrights NYC Guggenheim Museum. The apartments are located and sized based on radial lines. The outside has seamless balconies that surround the silos, and the facade is completely glass. No big surprise…
Tags: concrete, frosilos, industrial architecture, MVRDV












