Ofis Sarl

Old Printery

Old Printery 

OFIS Architects

Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

ARCHITECTS
Ofis Architects

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
Pro-elekt

STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING
Project Pa, Milan Sorč - Project Pa

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
Isp

OFIS PROJECT TEAM
Rok Oman, Špela Videčnik, Janez Martinčič, Andrej Gregorič, Matej Kranjc, Rok Vrenko, Borut Bernik, Marieke Van Dorpe

PHOTOGRAPHS
Tomaz Gregoric, Janez Martincic, Ofis Architects

PROJECT
2021-24

YEAR
2024

LOCATION
Slovenia

CATEGORY
Industrial Architecture, Renovation

Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

Text description provided by architect.

In the 1960s, the Slovenian modernist architect Savin Sever designed the Mladinska knjiga printing house. It was one of the largest and most modern printing houses of its time, the modular, repetitive concrete construction representing its key architectural expression.

The visible concrete structure, a poetic architectural element, was a characteristic feature of the post-war modernist period.

Edvard Ravnikar, one of Plečnik’s most important pupils, was the key figure during this period in Slovenian architecture. He was also strongly influenced by his collaboration in Le Corbusier’s studio.

Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

Ravnikar developed his own architectural poetics, both drawing on tradition and advancing it with a modernist approach that became the mark of Slovenia’s post-war generation of architects. Savin Sever is one of the most prominent representatives of this so-called Ljubljana school of architecture.

The old printing house was modernized at the beginning of the twenty-first century and the management at the time implemented state-of-the-art machines, but unfortunately they were not state-of-the-art for long.

Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

The changed context of the printing industry, a result of new digital technologies, would prove to be fatal for the traditional printing house. The old printing house soon shut its doors, most of the machinery sold off, and the large structure remained empty for several years.

Then several creative entrprises found a home within the building and a unique program began to generate new interest in the location.

Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

The new owner decided to refurbish it in 2022. The existing construction was protected, and, in any case, was so interesting as an expression of Sever’s exceptional architectural approach, that it would have been inconceivable to demolish it.

The structure had been dimensioned for heavy machinery, and therefore a wide variety of modern applications could be considered without additional reinforcements.

Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

The biggest challenge was presented by the thermal insulation of the building. How to ensure modern climatic conditions in a building that was built with the reverse logic?

The thin structure, full of thermal bridges, had originally served to remove excess heat generated by the printing presses. Now the principle had to be reversed.

Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

The visible concrete structures needed preserved and a new thermal insulation envelope added. The architects addressed this challenge with thermal insulation inside the building and additional glazing, which allowed the original glass prisms on the roof to remain intact.

Glass prisms placed between the concrete elements provide natural light throughout the depth of the building. The renovation of the façade was based on Sever’s original plans that were not realized when the building was erected.

Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

He had wanted cement panels but they were too expensive, and so the façade was instead made with modular bricks. Reinstating Sever’s original idea provided a solution for the technical upgrade of the building.

The only significant change to the original structure of the building was a new entrance. Originally, the workers of the printing house entered the building through the dressing rooms in the office wing.

This was not suitable for the purposes of the renovated building. A new monumental entrance was introduced on the south side.

Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Janez Martincic

The amphitheatrical staircase creates a sort of urban square within the building, welcoming people who enter, and serving as a meeting point.

It also provides a venue where events and performances can take place. It contains a segment of the printing machinery from the original building, thus presenting and preserving in memory its former use.

Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Janez Martincic

In recent decades, several buildings in Sever’s opus have been demolished. Despite the fact that Sever himself advocated the principles of functionalism and the notion that, once a building no longer serves its function, it should be replaced by a new one, these demolitions were tragically unnecessary and mostly the result of economic interests.

In contrast, the Old Printing House has been respectfully renovated and given a new lease on life.

Old Printery
© Janez Martincic
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric

This is both a great tribute to its creator and also provides a paradigm for new contemporary content within the context of a forgotten industrial heritage.


Old Printery
© OFIS Architects
Old Printery
© OFIS Architects
Old Printery
© OFIS Architects


Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Tomaz Gregoric
Old Printery
© Janez Martincic


Old Printery
High Basement Floor Plan
Old Printery
High Ground Floor Plan
Old Printery
Roof Plan
Old Printery
Site Plan


Old Printery
East Elevation
Old Printery
West Elevation
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South Elevation
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North Elevation


Old Printery
Section A
Old Printery
Detail

Ofis Sarl
Ofis Sarl
4 Impasse Mont Luis 75011 Paris, France