Ingenhoven Architects GmbH

Kö-Bogen II Office Building

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

KÖ-BOGEN II OFFICE BUILDING

Ingenhoven Architects

PROJECT MANAGEMENT
AIP Bauregie

STRUCTURAL PLANNING
Schüßler-Plan Ingenieurgesellschaft

MANUFACTURERS
Zumtobel, Erco GmbH, Kone GmbH, WILA Lichttechnik GmbH, WINDSCHEID & WENDEL GmbH & Co. KG

TEAM
Christoph Ingenhoven, Peter Jan van Ouwerkerk, Ben Dieckmann, Cem Uzman, Mehmet Congara, Vanessa Garcia Camicero, Yulia Grantovskikh, Tomoko Goi, Jakob Hense, Melike Islek, Christian Monning, Andres Pena Gomez, Peter Pistorius, Lukas Reichel, Jürgen Schreyer, Susana Somoza Parada, Jonas Unger, Nicolas Witsch, Dariusz Szczygielski, Stefan Boenicke, Thanh Dang

CLIENT
B&L Group, CENTRUM Projektentwicklung

AREA
41370 m²

YEAR
2020

LOCATION
Düsseldorf, Germany

CATEGORY
Office Buildings, Commercial Architecture

Sustainability is a mission:

Eight kilometers of hornbeam hedges for a supergreen®-project. Over 30,000 plants – Europe’s largest green facade.

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

The facade is an essential element of the Kö-Bogen II commercial and office building. The ensemble marks the conclusion of an urban renewal project in the heart of Düsseldorf.

It also represents a paradigm shift: from an urban perspective, it signals a departure from the automotive era and a turn towards people-oriented planning.

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

With Europe’s largest green facade, it offers an urban response to climate change and creating a new green heart in Düsseldorf’s inner city.

Today, where an elevated motorway once dominated the landscape, the Hofgarten has moved back into the heart of the city. Kö-Bogen’s sloping green facades face one another in a composition inspired by Land Art.

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

The new building complex oscillates in a deliberate indeterminacy between city and park. The two structures form a dynamic entrance to Gustaf-Gründgens-Platz, which opens up the view to icons of post-war modernism – the clear austerity of the Dreischeibenhaus (1960) and the buoyant lightness of the Schauspielhaus (1970).

Kö-Bogen II is a contemporary response to these two historic landmarks, without competing with them.

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

Going green. The hornbeam was intentionally selected as a native hardwood species that keeps its leaves in winter.

A comprehensive phytotechnological concept was developed together with Prof. Dr. Strauch, Beuth University of Applied Sciences, Berlin, to incorporate the hedges into the building design.

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

The greenery improves the city’s microclimate – it protects against the sun’s rays in summer and reduces urban heat, binds carbon dioxide, stores moisture, attenuates noise, and supports biodiversity.

The ecological benefit of the hornbeam hedges is equivalent to that of approximately 80 fully grown deciduous trees.

Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
© ingenhoven architects / HGEsch

This integration of nature into architecture offers a contemporary urban response to climate change.

The aim of Kö-Bogen II is to pursue an overall ecological concept, explicitly to improve the city's microclimate.


Kö-Bogen II Office Building
Plan - Site
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
Plan - Ground floor
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
Plan


Kö-Bogen II Office Building
Section
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
Elevation - West
Kö-Bogen II Office Building
Detail - Facade

Ingenhoven Architects GmbH
T +49 211 3010101 F +49 211 3010131
Ingenhoven Architects GmbH
Plange Mühle 1, 40221 Düsseldorf, Germany