Apartment Building in Pagkrati

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Apartment Building in Pagkrati

Mismatches
Financing
Promotion and production
Ownership and tenure

Main objectives of the project

The six- storey apartment building attempts to redefine the expression of a multi-unit housing building and its relationship with the existing, densely populated, urban fabric of Athens. At the same time, it is a new bioclimatic approach of organizing the front of the building block to the street and the public space of the city.

Date

  • 2019: Construction

Stakeholders

  • Architect: Demetrios Issaias
  • Architect: Tassis Papaioannou

Location

Continent: Europe
City: Atene
Country/Region: Athens, Greece

Description

After the Second World War, Greek cities developed under a particular entrepreneurial activity based on the activities of a small-scale construction industry and land acquisition. The key economic mechanism used was what is known in Greek as ‘antiparochi’, a land allowance, quid-pro-quo informal agreement between landowners and contractors, and the building model that fit the above was the multi-storey apartment building, namely the “polykatoikia” type. In order for this to work and to be profitable, plot sizes had to be of a certain dimension. This meant that many smaller plots have remained until today unbuilt, unused and abandoned, with small structures as traces and ruins of the past.

The plot, of just 119m2 and with an almost triangular shape, is what was left unbuilt in the block, defined by a partially demolished, pre-war three-storey building. If this plot was uneconomical and unprofitable for the typical contractor to develop, it consisted of a particular challenge for the design of a new building of small housing units, which would have to evolve in height.
A dense, homogenous urban form of tall apartment buildings characterizes the neighborhood. The building operates as an infill to the block, completing the continuous urban, street façades, while a sense of ‘hovering’ is created by leaving the entrance level open and permeable, creating a pilotis with a courtyard at the back of the plot. This courtyard visually connects the busy street with the small, uncovered spaces at the heart of the block.

The tubular-shaped staircase defines and differentiates the building from the adjacent “polykatoikia” and, like swivel, signifies the vertical circulation. Moreover, it liberates building mass from the party wall, expressing and transferring to the street the dynamic geometry of the triangular plot.

A particularly important strategic decision, which serves the environmental and bioclimatic design, is the creation of a layered façade, from the second level to the top of the building. At the top floor, the façade folds and turns into a pergola of a generous roof garden offered to all inhabitants to enjoy the spectacular, panoramic view to the city and its two most characteristic landmarks: the Parthenon and Lycabettus Hill.
The building is constructed of reinforced concrete, left un-plastered and in its natural color, both externally and internally. There is also extensive use of metal elements, in secondary structural elements, window frames and various details. The bioclimatic performance and energy output of the building was of particular concern with natural light and ventilation for all spaces and the use of renewable energy sustainable systems. The wooden panels are a key characteristic of the morphology and materiality of the project. Apart from creating double façade for solar protection and management, they operate as filter for the noise and the disturbance of the city, forming private semi-outdoor spaces. The panels are movable and therefore introduce an element of constant and dynamic variability through time.

Finally, the project explored the organic relationship between architecture and art, with the introduction of carefully selected forms from the work of Greek painter Alekos Fassianos that define different edges of the project. The architects also designed most furniture and internal equipment, made of plywood boards and timber in natural color.

Daidalos Tourist Resort

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Daidalos Tourist Resort

Mismatches
Financing
Urban Design

Main objectives of the project

Diadalos, a tourist village on Kos Island, harmoniously integrates with the Aegean landscape through its adaptive architecture. Divided into private, communal, and staff zones, the design prioritizes privacy, sea views, and respect for the site's topography. By eschewing repetitive hotel patterns, it aims to authentically capture the spirit of Greek Island architecture.

Date

  • 1992: Construction

Stakeholders

  • Architect: Nikos Valsamakis

Location

Continent: Europe
Country/Region: Greece

Description

Diadalos is a tourist village designed for 1000 people and located on Kos, one of the Greek Dodecanese Islands. The village is built on a plateau at 90m. elevation overlooking the sea to the south. The main design idea was the creation of an architecture that is well adapted to the physical and cultural identity of the place. Specifically, this architecture would take advantage adapted to the physical and cultural identity of the place. Specifically, this architecture would take advantage of the landscape, respect local topography and climate, and draw inspiration from the spatial qualities of the settlements in the Aegean. With the use of the simplest formal devices and contemporary means of construction, the design seeks to recapture the spirit of the architecture of the Greek Islands, and to bring out the quality of the Aegean landscape without resorting to the use of borrowed features and figures. This design approach also helps to transform the repetitive architectural patterns that are often associated with the architecture of hotels. The resort is divided into three zones.
The first provides private accommodation, the second consist of communal facilities while the third is that of the staff accommodation. There are two residential types, namely single-bedroom or two-bedroom family units. All units have a private verandah. Rather than opt for free standing pavilions, units are linked to form single or double-storey terraces of varying configurations. The terraces define an irregular pattern of narrow pedestrian streets, covered walkways and enclosed gardens. The principles governing the layout include the provision of privacy, the creation of views to the sea and respect for the slope, contours and orientation of the site. The resulting variety of spatial relationships gives a distinct identity to each point of the arrangement.