Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion

Prokš Přikryl architects

ARCHITECTS
Prokš Přikryl architects

LEAD ARCHITECTS
Martin Prokš, Marek Přikryl

MEASUREMENT
TECONT

MANUFACTURERS
JUNG, Jansen, Rako, Cihelna Kadaň, ABB, AZP, Brunner, Fermob, Gerriets, HSE, ISAN, Jika, Knauf, Montkov, Perfolinea, Reynaers, SANELA, Sklobeton, Tramontáž, Vyrtych, +1

LIGHTING DESIGNERS
Ladislav Tikovský (AST)

CONCRETE STRUCTURES
MDS Projekt

VENTILATION
Mikroklima

ELECTRICS
Miroslav Bouček

LIFT
TRAMONTÁŽ

GEOTHERMAL
GEROTOP

HEATING
Jiří Vik

MAIN CONTRACTOR
STAKO Hradec Králové

CIVIL ENGINEER
Jan Kolář

GRAPHICAL SYSTEM
Richard Wilde (publikum.design

GRAPHICAL DESIGN
publikum.design

FIRE SAFETY
Projekty PO

PLUMBING
MK Profi

ACOUSTICS / AV
SONING

PROGRAM / USE / BUILDING FUNCTION
Conversion, Cultural, Public

STEEL STRUCTURES
STA-CON

PHOTOGRAPHS
Petr Polák

AREA
1848 m²

YEAR
2023

LOCATION
Pardubice I, Czech Republic

CATEGORY
Cultural Architecture, Public Architecture, Adaptive Reuse

The Automatic Mills, a national cultural monument, is one of the first buildings designed by the architect Josef Gočár.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Standing on the banks of the Chrudimka River in the center of Pardubice, the monumental mill building was created in 1909 for the Winternitz brothers.

In 1924, the complex was extended to include a grain silo, the conversion of which we designed. The automatic mills operated continuously for more than 100 years until 2013.

Since 2016, the mill brownfield has been transforming a cultural and social urban district, thanks to the initiative of the Automatic Mills Foundation.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

This site is composed of several buildings and institutions (the regional Gočár Gallery, the city's “Gampa” Gallery, the “Sphere” central workshops for schools, the Infocentre and the Silo), linked by a brick carpet and equally by the unique tension existing between them.

Each of the architects has grasped their building in a different way.

All the buildings reinforce each other and thus form a living part of the city.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

The exceptional architects Zdeněk Balík, Jan Šépka, Petr Všetečka and investor Lukáš Smetana have contributed to the whole.

The main purpose of the Silo conversion is its social use, which one century after its construction has replaced the previous industrial function.

The multi-purpose upper hall hosts theatres, lectures, concerts and social events.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

The roof terrace with bar offers a new view of the city. Exhibitions will be held in the newly accessible grain bins, and the silo ground floor now forms a covered public space.

A basement with public toilets provides facilities for the entire new square.

A true building machine, it originally contained three basic parts: the milling technology (Prokop and Sons), the skeleton framework (the work of the builder Pollert) and the outer shell (architect Josef Gočár).

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Thanks to Josef Gočár, who was to become unquestionably the greatest Czech architect of the 20th century, the mills were from the outset never perceived as purely an industrial building.

Instead, they create the mystery of a machine hidden in a fortress. Even the grain silo, added to the mill in 1924, is itself not graspable.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Considerations about the main entrance led to the decision to uncover the secret: activating the ground floor on both sides and creating a freely accessible public space under the bins.

The idea of opening the building to the square went hand in hand with the overall opening of the site to the city after more than a century. Opening the gates, opening the parterre.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

We also introduced a new openness to the brick plinth by reintroducing a large opening that had been mysteriously closed. The exposed grain bins give the indoor space its atmosphere.

A connection is made at the parterre level via the side between the mills and the silo, at the location of the original doors. On the other side, by contrast, the base is broken through by a significantly wide new opening.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Today, as in the past, a single communication core connects the whole building.

The main change is the hall inserted into the former machine room on the 5th floor, granting the space a privileged position above the entire area. Together with the hall, the roof of the building has been made wheelchair accessible.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

The silo and its technology are characterized by verticality and a sense of vertical movement. The glass-concrete floor panels in the ground level and the hall create a path for light through all floors to the basement.

Excavated between massive columns, this basement serves for facilities. Almost an underworld of their own, the underground spaces could have been the result of the columns being found deeper than our explorations had anticipated.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Another newly accessible space is the inside areas of the grain bins on the second-floor level: here, the very essence of the silo becomes visible.

The interior modifications are restrained. Colors and brickworks are confined to the facades, the interior is muted, the range of materials is standard, and adheres to the principle of additions not standing in contrast to the old.

All original surfaces are retained, including the patinas, or various drill holes and scars left by the demolished partition walls.

Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák

Simply put, the aim is to develop the building in its rationality and monumentality.


Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
© Petr Polák


Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Model - Section elevation
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Model - Section elevation
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Scheme
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Model - New East facade


Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
West elevation
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
East elevation
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
North elevation
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
South elevation


Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Cross Sections
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Longitudinal section


Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan - Basement / Ground floor
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan - 1st and 2nd floor
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan - 3rd and 4th floor
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan - 5th and 6th floor
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan - 7th floor
Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan automatic mills - Site


Automatic Mills Grain Silo Conversion
Plan pardubice - Site