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client:  Foundation of the Amsterdam School of Arts

programme:  5 rooms for different types of music performances, foyer cum cafeteria, classrooms, study rooms, library, lecture hall and offices.

architect:  Frits van Dongen

project team:  C. Hayman, R. van Houten,
E. Thijssen, U. Garritzmann, S. Lippert, K. Bichler,
L. Afonso, B. Arab, R. Konijn, K. R. Sluijs, F. Verwij

contractor:  building consortium Hillen & Roosen - de Nijs VOF

structural engineer:  Aronsohn Constructies, Rotterdam

acoustics advisor:  Peutz & Associés bv, Zoetermeer

installation advisor:  HE Adviseurs Raadgevende Ingenieurs

date of commission:  2001

date of construction:  2005 - 2007

gross surface:  16.000 m²

Conservatorium van Amsterdam, Amsterdam

The Conservatorium of Amsterdam can best be described as a college of music and a concert hall in one. The U-shaped configuration, next to the new Central Library of Amsterdam, is grouped around a courtyard which opens up toward the culture plaza to the west. The L-shaped office block which is yet to be realized screens off the sound from the railway line behind it.

The functional programme of the Conservatorium has three parts: the performing heart, consisting of 5 auditoriums for different kinds of music and the foyer-cum-canteen; the college building with all the classrooms; and the study building with the library, the lecture hall and the offices. The design follows this subdivision by organizing the vertical components in three clusters: from collective to individual, from extravert to introvert.

Due to the complex acoustic demands and the required high standard of sound insulation for the Conservatorium, the programme has been turned inside out. The engawa principle has been applied: a Japanese housing typology where all passageways are placed along the perimeter of the building. This way all corridors leading to the classrooms and study rooms serve as a sound- and thermal buffer while making the activities visible from the outside.

Notable features

  • Music academy with classrooms facing outwards along glazed corridors make an educative showcase in city centre.
  • Corridors form a insulating double skin facade and function as sound buffer (Engawa principle).
  • Renewable energy through use of city heating.
  • Adaptive automatic opening of glass facade regulates temperature and reduces energy usage.
  • Lecture hall is a full concert hall and the entrance is a cafe.
  • Strategic positioned at 200 m. from central station.
  • 1st prize NBD Architecture Trophy 2009.
  • 1st prize Gyproc Trophy 2009 .
  • 1st prize International Architecture Award for 2009.