Universal Design Quarter

Dratelnstraße 32 a, 21109 Hamburg, Germany
Universal Design Quarter, Hamburg
Video © OFFscreen 2021
Photo © Jan Bitter

In 2017 the project was one of the world's largest residential building in modular timber construction, “Woodie” offers micro-apartments for 371 students. The building is part of a new residential district in the Wilhelmsburg area of Hamburg, which builds on the experimental character of the 2013 International Building Exhibition and embodies the principles of Universal Design: sustainable, simple and inclusive.
Alternating bays and projections articulate this long building so that it fits in with the smaller scale of its surroundings. Its form also continues the rhythm of the neighbouring State Ministry of Urban Development and Housing along a busy route for cyclists and pedestrians.

The purpose and the functional layout of the student hall of residence are clearly expressed on its exterior. The ground floor structure and the three service cores are in conventional reinforced concrete construction with an additional outer shell of exposed concrete. Simply put, the ground floor structure is a kind of concrete table, on which the 371 residential modules are stacked for five or six floors. Below the cantilevered tabletop at the cores, there are spaces for communal use and gastronomy, which have full-height glazing. The open-air ground floor space between the cores not only makes the building permeable within the city's built fabric, but also provides covered parking for some four hundred bicycles.

The apartments each have 20 m² floor area and are completely prefabricated from solid wood, including their fixtures. With the exception of the natural rubber floor covering, the wood has been left visible on every surface. This contributes to a comfortable and healthy indoor climate for the residents. The rear-ventilated facade cladding is made of greyed larch wood in prefabricated panels.

The exemptions granted in the fire protection certificate (for producing the load-bearing walls, ceilings and facades in wood) set a precedent in Hamburg that opened the way for a change in the state's building regulations: since November 2016 the city has allowed buildings of up to 22 metres in height to be built of timber.

Site Plan
Drawing © SHA
Photo © Jan Bitter
Ground floor plan
© SHA
Photo © Jan Bitter
Photo © Jan Bitter
Assembly of the wooden modules
Drawing © SHA
First floor plan
Drawing © SHA
Assembly of the wooden modules
Drawing © SHA
Photo © Jan Bitter
Drawing © SHA
Photo © Jan Bitter
Year
2017
Client
Dritte Primus Projekt GmbH – eine Beteiligungsgesellschaft der PRIMUS developments GmbH
Team
Jürgen Bartenschlag, Jil Bentz, Sibylle Bornefeld, Daniel Eichenberg, Louisa Hutton, Jonathan Janssens, Bettina Magistretti, Isabelle McKinnon, Matthias Sauerbruch, Ana Rita Silvestre Caneira, Francesco Tonnarelli, Felix Xylander-Swannell, Juan Lucas Young, Jörg Albeke, Ben Hansen, Falco Herrmann, Erik Levander, Maria Saffer, Kim Istenič, Anton Leibham, Duarte Mendia Vieira, Leonardo Ottaviani, Jonah Ross-Marrs, Daisy Tickner, Agustin Uliarte, Jin Zhaoyun, Julien Engelhardt
landscape architecture
Sinai Gesellschaft von Landschaftsarchitekten mbH
strucural planning
Wetzel & von Seht, Hamburg; Merz Kley Partner, Dornbirn
HVAC
PHA Planungsbüro für haustechnische Anlagen GmbH, Volkmarsen
building physics
Wetzel & von Seht, Hamburg
fire protection
Dekra Automobil GmbH Industrie, Bau und Immobilien, Hamburg
acoustics
Lärmkontor GmbH, Hamburg
timber construction
Kaufmann Bausysteme GmbH, Reuthe, AT
concrete construction
August Prien Bauunternehmung Gmbh & Co KG, Hamburg
transom facade (ground floor
BS Metallbau-Schiffsausbau GmbH & Co KG, Lemgo
lighting
Hadler GmbH
natural rubber flooring
nora systems GmbH
transom facade (ground floor)
Schüco

Other Projects by Sauerbruch Hutton 

Immanuel Church and Parish Centre
Cologne, Germany
Franklin Village
Mannheim, Germany
GSW Headquarters
Berlin, Germany
Experimenta
Heilbronn, Germany
Werkhof
Berlin, Germany