Dutch architectural practice BaksvanWengerden has completed a wonky delicatessen in the town of Oegstgeest.
The ground and first floors of the three-storey Dames Dietz Deli Shop lean outwards to maximise space on the compact plot while also creating a double-height entrance between the wall and the first floor balcony.
The third floor then leans sharply inwards again to create a sloping roof that meets the neighbouring building's roofline.
The walls and ceilings of the interior are finished in horizontally clad wood while the exterior is clad in brown ceramic tiles.
The shop occupies the ground floor, while the the kitchen and storage areas are located upstairs.
We recently featured a splayed concrete extension to a triangular house in the Netherlands by the same architects.
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Photographs are by Yvonne Brandwijk and Kaj van Geel.
Here's more information from the architects:
A deli shop was commissioned for the main shopping street of the town Oegstgeest. The ambition is to realise a highly sustainable building. The plot is located next to a side gable wall of a terrace house development. Due to the limited plot size the only way to fit the programme is to stack it in three layers. The cantilever on the upper floors maximises the volume.
Build in different historical time periods, the location is surrounded by a large variety of roof shapes and styles. These roof shapes were mostly derived from practical effectiveness and technical limitations as well as social and cultural reasons. All these arguments are still valid, except for the technical ones. Therefore the sloping planes are interpreted more freely.
Ground floor plan
The municipal development plan and an ease of use attached to the plot prescribe clear and absolute regulations. Combining these parameters BaksvanWengerden created a building that diverges from the vertical and horizontal on all levels. Sloping planes to draw one into the shop; to bring in natural light; to create more space on the upper levels and to continue the existing roofline. The result is a building which appears simultaneously integrated and alienated.
First floor plan
The shop is constructed in a 100% sustainable building system; Nurholz. It is the first commercial project completed with this Cradle2Cradle structural framework method. This unique, sustainable system integrates the structure, the services, the internal finishes as well as the insulating properties.
Second floor plan
Client: Dames Dietz
Programme: New building for Deli Shop in Oestgeest
Area: 100m2
Project Architects: Gijs Baks, Jacco van Wengerden,
Contributors: Rui Duarte, Vineta du Toit
Stuctural engineer: Van Rossum Raadgevende Ingenieurs, Adviesbureau Luning
Contractor: Van Berkel Aannemers, Leimuiden
Interior designer: BaksvanWengerden Architecten, Amsterdam
Structural framework: Bouwpuur, Roosendaal
Interior fit-out: Thomas Meubels, Amsterdam
Status Commenced: September 2009, completed May 2012